Caisse de depot set to make investment in Mexico - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 02:19 AM | Calgary | -11.7°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Business

Caisse de depot set to make investment in Mexico

Canada's second-largest pension fund, Caisse de depot et placement du Qubec, is set to make a big foray into Mexico following an initial $100-million investment in real estate, according to two sources familiar with the matter.

Pension fund looks at infrastructure projects

Sources report that the Caisse de Depot will invest in infrastructure projects in Mexico, which is benefiting from the NAFTA trade agreement. (Canadian Press)

Canada's second-largest pension fund, Caisse de depot et placement du Qubec, is set to make a big foray into Mexico following an initial $100-million investment in real estate, according to two sources familiar with the matter.

The sources, who requested not to be named as the deal is not yet public, said the Quebec fund is poised to soon unveil a large infrastructure-related investment in the Latin American country.

One source said Caisse and a Mexican institutional investor plan to create a joint fund to invest up to several billion dollars in domestic infrastructure projects. A deal is likely to be finalized soon, the source said.

A Caisse spokesman declined to comment on the matter.

The planned infrastructure fund comes on the heels of a Mexico City investment last week by the Caisse's real estate arm Ivanhoe Cambridge.

Airport, broadband investment

The deals underscore the growing global ambitions of the Caisse, which had $294.5 billion in assets under management as of Dec. 31, 2013, and manages pension and insurance funds in the Canadian province of Qubec.

It also comes as large projects promised by Mexico President Enrique Pena Nieto, who has spent his first two years in office passing numerous economic reforms, move closer to getting under way.

These projects include high-speed passenger rail from Mexico City to Queretaro, a new $9-billion airport in the capital and a $10-billion national broadband network. An impending spin-off of thousands of telecom towers owned by Carlos Slim's America Movil could also present an investment opportunity.

Caisse Chief Executive Michael Sabia is very familiar with the telecom sector, having run BCE, Canada's largest telecom company for six years before moving on to head the pension fund manager in 2009, after the global financial crisis.

The fund lost $39.8 billion in 2008, due in part to risky real estate bets, and saw its net asset base drop to about $120 billion. It has since been on a surer footing, with net assets recovering to nearly $215 billion as of June 30.

In June, Sabia said the Caisse, which has long focused on investments in companies and projects within Qubec, would increasingly be looking for opportunities abroad.

Offices in Mexico, Singapore

The fund planned to expand its investing teams and work with new partners, he said, adding it would open an office in Mexico and Singapore, as part of a plan to boost investments in Latin America and Asia.

"It is our responsibility to go out and seek returns where they are," said Sabia. "This will be one of the cornerstones of everything we do over the next five years."

The overseas bets would mirror those of its larger rival, the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB), which has been actively investing funds in infrastructure, real estate and logistics assets overseas in the last few years.

Caisse, CPPIB and rival pension funds and sovereign wealth funds, are all scouting for long-life revenue generating assets. The firms have been making significant bets in physical assets like farmland and forests, along with investments in ports, real estate, hydro-electric power projects and other such assets.

Ivanhoe Cambridge, Caisse's real estate arm, announced last week that it plans to make its first direct investment in Mexico, with an initial investment of more than $100 million in a project in Mexico City. Ivanho Cambridge, which has some $40 billion in assets, will spend up to $500 million on its Mexican venture.