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CPPIB Has Worst Year Since 2009 as Virus Hits Stock Returns

CPPIB Has Worst Year Since 2009 as Virus Hits Stock Returns

(Bloomberg) -- The head of Canada Pension Plan Investment Board says office towers won’t stay out of favor forever.

Many banks are planning only a partial return to offices in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic and tech companies like Twitter Inc. and Shopify Inc. may never return fully return. But the fund’s chief executive officer, Mark Machin, said the future is still good for prime office towers.

“There’s probably going to be still robust demand for great office space in central locations,” Machin said in an interview with Bloomberg TV Tuesday. “Once there is decent immunity across the population or some lowering of the mobility of the disease, you’ll get people wanting to be with each other. This is human nature and the office is a part of that.”

CPPIB Has Worst Year Since 2009 as Virus Hits Stock Returns

Companies will probably even need more space for physical distancing, though he said the longer the pandemic goes on, the more efficient and attractive working from home will become. Elevators for the tall buildings will also pose a challenge when the economies reopen.

CPPIB has long invested heavily in hard assets such as office towers. Machin said other real estate such as data centers and warehouses have been buoyed by the e-commerce trend in the pandemic and will probably continue to thrive. Shopping malls will have a more challenging time.

Stocks Sap Returns

The pension fund returned 3.1% for the fiscal year, its worst showing since the financial crisis, as the selloff in equity markets in February and March dragged down results.

Net assets were C$409.6 billion ($295 billion) as of March 31, the fund’s fiscal year-end. That represented growth of C$17.6 billion, consisting of of C$12.1 billion in net income from investments and C$5.5 billion in new contributions, CPPIB said in a statement Tuesday.

The numbers mean Canada’s largest pension find suffered about C$15.8 billion in investment losses in the first three months of 2020. The fund had reported C$27.9 billion in investment gains for the nine months ended Dec. 31.

“Despite severe downward pressure in our final quarter, the fund’s 12.6% return on a 2019 calendar-year basis, combined with the relative resilience of our diversified portfolio, helped cushion the impact,” Machin said in the statement.

‘Experience Economy’

The fund’s 3.1% investment gain outperformed its benchmark portfolio’s 3.1% loss, which equates to a value-added return of C$23.4 billion for the year, after deducting all costs, the fund said. Ten-year and five-year annualized net nominal returns were 9.9% and 7.7%, respectively, which “should give Canadians comfort that, even with periodic shocks, their pensions ultimately draw from decades of steady performance,” Machin said.

According to Machin, assets related to travel or experience within a small space will likely be impacted for quite a while.

“The experience-economy trend is going to be hard, that’s on hold,” he said in the interview. “But then there are a lot of other trends, such as e-commerce, delivery, telemedicine, fintech, these areas have seen an enormous uptick of adoption, online education as well.”

While tensions between China and the rest of the world have increased, Machin still sees value in investing in Asia.

“The reason we invest in Asia, and any of the big, liquid emerging markets really, is that it is a huge market that we can diversify into that is relatively uncorrelated with the rest of the world. And alpha outperforms the inefficiencies in those markets,” he said.

Machin said the current environment will probably be a big test for private credit.

“Some of the players who were a little late to the game, and those who were more aggressive to build market share will likely face some pressure,” he said. “We’re going to see more stress on the credit space, depending on how long this goes on.”

Losses in Resources

CPPIB is designed to serve contributors and beneficiaries for decades, so long-term results are a more appropriate measure of performance than quarterly or annual cycles, the fund said.

“The Covid-19 pandemic poses a massive challenge for health, societies and economies globally. Amid the significant number of concerns many Canadians have today, the sustainability of the fund is one thing they shouldn’t worry about,” Machin said.

The fund’s holdings of Canadian public equities lost 12.2% for the year and emerging markets stocks dropped 9.1%, while foreign stocks generated a return of 1.6%.

All credit investments returned 0.5% and real estate returned 5.1%, while infrastructure dropped 1%. Canadian private equity investments lost 5.1%, while foreign PE returned 6%. Energy and resources had the single biggest loss, posting a negative return of 23.4%.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.