Toronto Star

CPPIB reports highest annual return since inception in 1999

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A record return over the first full year of the pandemic has put the manager of Canada’s largest retirement fund years ahead of schedule to meet a long-term goal of having half a trillion dollars in assets by 2028.

Canada Pension Plan Investment Board reported Thursday that its funds earned 20.4 per cent net of all costs for its 2021 fiscal year ended March 31, the highest annual return since its inception in 1999. As of March 31, CPP Investment­s had $497.2 billion in assets under its management, up from $407.3 billion in fiscal 2020 when it had a below-average return of 3.1 per cent due to the onset of the COVID pandemic.

CPP Investment­s CEO John Graham, who was previously CPP Investment’s global head of credit investment­s and replaced Mark Machin in February, said conditions changed rapidly and in the fund’s favour over the past year.

“We’re seven years ahead of schedule for reaching half a trillion dollars,” Graham said in an interview.

CPPIB has a 75-year investment horizon, much longer than most privatesec­tor funds, and it’s designed to ensure the Canada Pension Plan will be able to meet its obligation­s to retirees for decades to come.

All six of CPPIB’s department­s showed positive performanc­e over fiscal 2021, although some gains were offset by foreign exchange losses due to the Canadian dollar’s strength compared with the U.S. dollar. One of the organizati­on’s recent strategic moves was to combine the two teams that invested separately in convention­al and new energy.

Graham said the new sustainabl­e energy group will be headed by Bruce Hogg, who founded CPPIB’s power and renewables group a few years ago, with a member of the convention­al energy group in the No. 2 executive position.

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