PSP Investments Posts 10.9% Return in Fiscal Year 2022 as Net Assets under Management Grow by 12.7% to $230.5 Billion (2024)

Highlights:

  • Ten-year net annualized return of 9.8% leads to $25.9 billion in cumulative net investment gains above Reference Portfolio, indicative of long-term added value through portfolio construction and active management decisions
  • Five-year net annualized return of 9.0% leads to $19.7 billion in cumulative net investment gains above Reference Portfolio
  • One-year total portfolio net return of 10.9% outperforms Reference Portfolio
  • Continued focus on risk management supports agile response to markets in a rapidly evolving global landscape
  • Inaugural green bond issuance, first climate strategy and bespoke Green Asset Taxonomy indicate continuing focus on integrating ESG factors into responsible investment decision-making
  • Shift to a hybrid workplace poised to attract and retain top talent in a highly competitive environment

MONTRÉAL, June 9, 2022 /PRNewswire/ - The Public Sector Pension Investment Board (PSP Investments) ended its fiscal year on March 31, 2022, with $230.5 billion of net assets under management (AUM) and a 10.9% one-year net portfolio return. Net assets under management grew by nearly $26 billion, up 12.7% from $204.5 billion at the end of the previous fiscal year. Net contributions represented $3.5 billion, while $22.5 billion was generated from net income.

From a long-term investment approach perspective, PSP Investments measures success at the total fund level through the following performance objectives and their related benchmarks:

- Achieve a return – net of expenses– greater than the return of the Reference Portfolio over a 10-year period: During fiscal year 2022, PSP Investments achieved a 10-year net annualized return of 9.8% against the Reference Portfolio benchmark of 8.4%, leading to $25.9 billion in cumulative net investment gains above the Reference Portfolio. This outperformance of 1.4% per annum represents the value added by PSP Investments' strategic asset allocation decisions and active asset management activities.

- Achieve a return – net of expenses – exceeding the Total Fund Benchmark return over 10-year and 5-year periods:During fiscal year 2022, PSP Investments achieved a 10-year net annualized return of 9.8% against the Total Fund Benchmark of 8.6% and a 5-year net annualized return of 9.0% against the Total Fund Benchmark of 7.9%. This represents an outperformance of 1.2% per annum (or $16 billion over 10 years) and 1.1% per annum (or $10.6 billion over 5 years) respectively.

During fiscal year 2022, PSP investments continued to generate strong net income as the markets recovered, translating into a higher AUM of $230.5B at the end of the fiscal year as compared to $204.5B at the end of fiscal year 2021. PSP Investments' increase in operating costs was lower than the average AUM growth of 18.0% and was in line with its strategic and operational priorities including talent retention and total fund performance. Due to a combination of sound cost management and the increase in net AUM, PSP Investments' total cost ratio decreased below our expected average costs and represents the lowest ratio in the last seven fiscal years.

"In the wake of the pandemic, PSP Investments delivered solid, above-benchmark performance," said Neil Cunningham, President and Chief Executive Officer at PSP Investments. "We did so at the same time as raising our climate ambition by developing our first climate strategy and a bespoke green asset taxonomy. These actions enable us to use our capital and influence to support the transition to global net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050."

"Our 10-year and five-year performance indicates the long-term value we add through patient capital, portfolio construction and active investment activities," said Eduard van Gelderen, Senior Vice President and Chief Investment Officer at PSP Investments. "The broad diversification of our portfolio across public and private asset classes, industries, geographies and currencies has been a key factor in helping us reduce risk and improve resilience."

ASSET CLASS

(at March 31, 2022)

NET ASSETS
UNDER
MANAGEMENT
(billion $)1

ONE-YEAR
RETURN

FIVE-YEAR
RETURN

% OF TOTAL
NET ASSETS

Capital Markets

$99.9B

3.0%

7.4%

43.4%

Private Equity

$35.4B

27.6%

17.6%

15.3%

Credit Investments

$21.9B

7.5%

7.9%

9.5%

Real Estate

$31.1B

24.8%

8.7%

13.5%

Infrastructure

$23.5B

13.9%

10.4%

10.2%

Natural Resources

$11.6B

15.9%

8.5%

5.0%

Complementary Portfolio

$1.4B

16.9%

12.0%

0.6%




1 This table excludes Cash and Cash equivalents. All amounts in Canadian dollars, unless stated otherwise.

As at March 31, 2022:

Capital Markets, comprised of Public Market Equities and Fixed Income, ended the fiscal year with $99.9 billion of net AUM, an increase of $2.4 billion from the end of fiscal year 2021. The group generated portfolio income of $2.9 billion, for a one-year return of 3.0% versus the benchmark return of 1.3%. The five-year annualized return was 7.4%, compared to the 6.6% benchmark return. Public Market Equities, with a year-end AUM of $59.1 billion, a one year-return of 6.0% and a five-year return of 10.1% (versus 3.3% and 8.8% for the respective benchmark returns), was able to outperform as global equity markets were impacted by the emergence of highly contagious COVID-19 variants. The majority of Public Market Equities' positive relative performance in fiscal year 2022 came from alternative investments, where many investments were well-positioned to take advantage of market dislocations induced by a notable increase in macroeconomic events. Fixed Income ended the fiscal year with a net AUM of $40.7 billion and outperformed its one-year benchmark by 0.2% and its five-year benchmark by 0.1%.

Private Equityended the fiscal year with net AUM of $35.4 billion, up $3.7 billion from the end of the previous fiscal year, and generated portfolio income of $8.6 billion, resulting in a one-year return of 27.6% versus the benchmark return of 19.5%. The five-year annualized return was 17.6% versus a benchmark of 17.2%. The strong performance highlights the strength and quality of the private equity portfolio, both in co-investments and funds. In addition to a favourable valuation environment, portfolio income has been driven by strong earnings growth and cashflows, particularly in the financials and healthcare sectors. The growth of the portfolio was driven by $6.3 billion in valuation gains and $6.4 billion in acquisitions. During the fiscal year, Private Equity deployed $4.4 billion of capital through funds and $2.0 billion in new co-investments which included supporting growth in existing portfolio companies.

Credit Investmentsended the fiscal year with net AUM of $21.9 billion, up by $7.4 billion from the end of the previous fiscal year, and generated portfolio income of $1.2 billion, resulting in a 7.5% one-year return that exceeded the benchmark return of -0.5%. The 7.9% five-year annualized return also beat the 2.6% benchmark return. Record levels of acquisition activity by private equity sponsors led to significant opportunities for Credit Investments across the debt capital spectrum.

Real Estateended the fiscal year with $31.1 billion in net AUM, up by $4.3 billion from the end of the previous fiscal year, and generated $6.4 billion in portfolio income, resulting in a 24.8% one-year return, versus 30.2% for the benchmark return. The 8.7% five-year return exceeded the 8.0% return for the benchmark. Real Estate focused on deploying into high conviction sectors, resulting in key acquisitions within the industrial, residential, life science and studio sectors.

Infrastructureended the fiscal year with $23.5 billion in net AUM, a $5.1 billion increase from the end of the previous fiscal year and generated $2.7 billion of portfolio income. The one-year return of 13.9% was below the benchmark return of 16.1%. The five-year annualized return of 10.4% exceeded the 6.4% benchmark return. During the fiscal year, Infrastructure deployed $4.8 billion of capital in direct and co-investments and $1.3 billion through the funds. New investments supported energy-friendly transition across Europe and Oceania by acquiring equity participations in utilities and industrials.

Natural Resourcesended the fiscal year with net AUM of $11.6 billion, an increase of $1.9 billion from the end of the previous fiscal year, and generated portfolio income of $1.6 billion, for a one-year return of 15.9%, versus 26.3% for the benchmark return. The 8.5% five-year annualized return beat the benchmark return of 7.6%. The fiscal year was marked by significant valuation gains of $1.3 billion and continued strong deployment of $1.9 billion, mainly in Oceania and the US.

Corporate Highlights

We launched the execution of our new strategic plan, PSP Forward, with the vision to be an insightful global investor and valued partner that is selective across markets and is focused on the long-term. Key accomplishments for fiscal year 2022 include:

  • We released our Green Bond Framework and issued a C$1.0 billion 10-year Green Bond to fund projects that demonstrate positive environmental and climate outcomes. PSP Investments' Green Bond Framework is aligned with existing standards in green bond and sustainable debt markets, and was awarded a rating of "Medium Green" and the highest possible governance score of "Excellent" by CICERO Shades of Green.
  • We prioritized climate change as an important focus area company-wide during fiscal year 2022 and committed to use our capital and influence to contribute to the transition to global net zero greenhouse gas emissions (GHG) by 2050. By implementing our climate strategy, we expect to reduce our portfolio GHG emissions intensity by 20% to 25% by 2026, from a 2021 baseline. We outlined a clear and straightforward approach for achieving our commitments that include substantial investments in green and transition assets, the latter being those that will require capital and assertive mitigation plans to reduce their carbon intensity along a science-based trajectory. Developed during fiscal year 2022, the climate strategy was launched in April 2022 and is available on our website.
  • We continued to enhance our data-driven approach to integrating ESG factors into our investment and asset management processes and practices. We developed an ESG Composite Score that incorporates the standards of the Sustainability Accounting Standards Board and enables our investment teams to integrate ESG information with data-driven insights as we quantitatively assess and monitor a company's ESG performance. We ranked among the founding members of the ESG Data Convergence Project, the first LP-GP partnership aiming to standardize ESG reporting in the private equity industry We also joined the Institutional Limited Partners Association's Diversity in Action Initiative and participated in various other industry collaboration initiatives including the Investor Leadership Network, the Sustainable Action Finance Council and Focusing Capital on the Long Term.
  • Our technology and digital strategy remains a key strategy enabler, supporting PSP Investments with scalable systems, organized data and advanced analytics. In fiscal year 2022, we continued to modernize and simplify our technology platforms and data governance to enable efficient global investment operations. We also initiated the build-out of our self-serve analytics capabilities and continued incubating use cases within our advanced analytics framework.
  • We took action to respond to the opportunity of reimagining the future of work following the workplace disruptions created by the pandemic. One of the changes we embraced was the shift of employee expectations related to flexibility on where, when and how work gets done. During fiscal year 2022, we developed a principles-based hybrid workforce model to facilitate the transition to a new way of working. We placed a heightened focus on the employee experience, building trust, leading with empathy, managing with accountability, leveraging inclusivity and promoting collaboration and well-being.
  • Nurturing an inclusive and respectful work environment has been at the top of our people agenda for many years. We recognize the importance of equity, inclusion and diversity (Ei&D) – a cornerstone of our corporate culture - in attracting and retaining top talent and building high-performing teams. We conducted our second annual employee self-identification survey in fiscal year 2022 to continue to better understand our workforce demographics and measure progress. Spearheaded by our Ei&D Council and its eight affinity groups, we continued to embed Ei&D into our workplace culture and developed a three-year roadmap for delivering on our Ei&D priorities. As a notable example, our Veteran Integration Program celebrated its one-year anniversary and is currently recruiting for the next cohort of participants. Our efforts were recognized with a Canadian HR Award in the category Excellence in Diversity and Inclusion and a ranking as a Montréal Top Employer for a fifth consecutive year.

Other corporate highlights include:

  • We are deeply committed to the communities where we operate. During fiscal year 2022, our PSP Gives Back campaign raised close to $500,000 (including PSP Investments' matching donations), which represented a 14% increase over last year. Funds benefited a range of local charities in Montréal, Hong-Kong, London and New York.
  • We remain deeply concerned about the humanitarian impact inflicted by Russia's invasion of Ukraine. While PSP Investments does not have material exposure to Russian investments and does not hold any private direct investments in Russia, we have some exposure through passive index replication and external investment manager activities. As stated in our press release, we took immediate steps to divest of our Russian holdings, committing to exit this market completely as soon as conditions permit, and we continue to actively monitor the evolving risks and implications for our portfolio and investment activities. As a special initiative, we partnered with the International Committee of the Red Cross and raised $139,000 over a three-week period through a combination of employee donations and PSP Investments' matching contributions.
  • Board succession planning was an important topic in fiscal year 2022. Mr. Garnet Garven and Mr. William Mackinnon fully completed their mandates. PSP Investments thanked them for their years of exceptional service and welcomed the arrival of three new directors – Mr. Gregory Chrispin, Ms. Helen Mallovy Hicks, and Mr. Maurice Tulloch – and the reappointment of Ms. Miranda Hubbs. PSP Investments' Board comprises six women and five men, and during fiscal year 2023, all four of the Board's standing committees will be chaired by women.
  • During fiscal year 2022, Ms. Michelle Ostermann joined PSP Investments as Senior Vice President and Global Head of Capital Markets Investments. Mr. Patrick Samson, formerly Senior Managing Director and Global Head of Infrastructure, was appointed Senior Vice President and Global Head of Real Assets.
  • During fiscal year 2022, Mr. Neil Cunningham, President and CEO, announced his planned retirement at the end of our next fiscal year, on March 31, 2023. PSP Investments has thrived under Mr. Cunningham's leadership, with important advances on its strategy and presence in international markets, leading to strong financial performance.

"I want to thank PSP Investments' management, employees and Board of Directors for their dedication over the past couple of years; their commitment and resilience have been nothing short of amazing," said Neil Cunningham, President and Chief Executive Officer of PSP Investments. "Despite all challenges and difficulties posed by the pandemic and global affairs, we remained ever mindful of our responsibility to create a better tomorrow for the 900,000 contributors and beneficiaries on whose behalf we invest. While I will be retiring in March 2023, I have confidence in the passion and abilities of my colleagues to ensure PSP Investments' future sustainability and performance."

For more information on PSP Investments' fiscal year 2022 performance, visit our website and download the annual report. In a break from our previous practice, our Responsible Investment Report will be released in the fall of 2022.

About PSP Investments

The Public Sector Pension Investment Board (PSP Investments) is one of Canada's largest pension investment managers with $230.5 billion of net assets under management as of March 31, 2022. It manages a diversified global portfolio composed of investments in capital markets, private equity, real estate, infrastructure, natural resources and credit investments. Established in 1999, PSP Investments manages and invests amounts transferred to it by the Government of Canada for the pension plans of the federal Public Service, the Canadian Forces, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and the Reserve Force. Headquartered in Ottawa, PSP Investments has its principal business office in Montréal and offices in New York, London and Hong Kong. For more information, visit investpsp.com or follow us on Twitter and LinkedIn.

SOURCE PSP Investments

PSP Investments Posts 10.9% Return in Fiscal Year 2022 as Net Assets under Management Grow by 12.7% to $230.5 Billion (1)

PSP Investments Posts 10.9% Return in Fiscal Year 2022 as Net Assets under Management Grow by 12.7% to $230.5 Billion (2024)

FAQs

What is the return of PSP Investments 2022? ›

Montréal, Canada, June 9, 2022 - The Public Sector Pension Investment Board (PSP Investments) ended its fiscal year on March 31, 2022, with $230.5 billion of net assets under management (AUM) and a 10.9% one-year net portfolio return.

What is the net assets of PSP Investments? ›

About PSP Investments

The Public Sector Pension Investment Board (PSP Investments) is one of Canada's largest pension investors with $243.7 billion of net assets under management as of March 31, 2023.

How big is the PSP capital Partners Fund? ›

We are a long-term real estate investment manager for family office and institutional capital with a current portfolio of over $2 billion of acquired and developed multifamily and industrial assets.

What is the PSP investment risk management policy? ›

The Investment Risk Management Policy, which covers investment risk matters for all investments in the Plan Accounts, is administered by PSP Investments' Risk Management department and states that PSP Investments will use quantitative and qualitative risk measures to assess investment risk.

Is PSP ETF a good investment? ›

The final word on private equity ETFs

PSP might not be the best option if you're looking for an alternative investment with positive expected returns and a low correlation to stocks and bonds. In that case, managed futures or commodities might be a better pick for attaining diversification.

What does PSP Investments stand for? ›

PSP Investments - Public Sector Pension Investment. Our Offices.

Who does PSP invest for? ›

PSP Investments is a pension fund managing over $230B on behalf of members of various Canadian defense and police forces. The firm invests in Capital Markets, Real Estate, Private Equity, Infrastructure, Credit, and Natural Resources. PSP manages funds for the Public Sector Pension Investment Board.

What is net asset value of a hedge fund? ›

Net Asset Value is the net value of an investment fund's assets less its liabilities, divided by the number of shares outstanding. Funds can be open or closed and the pricing of each share is based on NAV. The price of each fund share is reflected as the NAVPS or per-share value.

What does net worth of investments include? ›

The net worth of your (and if married, your spouse's) current investments is the amount left over after deducting the debt from the value of each investment. A negative value of one property can't be used to reduce the value of other investment properties.

What is the biggest ever private equity fund? ›

How Private Equity Works
RankPrivate equity firmMoney Raised Over Five Years
1Blackstone Inc. (ticker: BX)$125.6 billion
2KKR & Co. Inc. (KKR)$103.7 billion
3EQT AB (OTC: EQBBF)$101.7 billion
4Thoma Bravo LLC$74.1 billion
6 more rows
Feb 22, 2024

What is the largest private equity fund in the US? ›

What Are the Biggest U.S. PE Firms?
Top U.S. Private Equity FirmsAUM
The Carlyle Group$381 billion
Bain Capital$165 billion
TPG Capital$137 billion
Thoma Bravo$127 billion
6 more rows
Mar 21, 2024

How big is Sycamore Partners fund? ›

It managed about $11 billion as of December 31, 2022, according to Sycamore's Form ADV. The firm raised $1 billion for its debut fund in 2011 and closed Fund II on $2.5 billion in 2014.

What is the legal name for PSP investments? ›

The Public Sector Pension Investment Board (“PSP Investments”) is a Crown corporation created under the Public Sector Pension Investment Board Act, S.C. 1999, c.

What is the history of PSP investments? ›

PSP Investments was established by the Public Sector Pension Investment Board Act in 1999. We are a Canadian Crown corporation that invests funds for the pension plans of the federal public service, the Canadian Forces, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and the Reserve Force.

What are the risks of investing in managed funds? ›

You have no control over investment decisions and may not know the exact makeup of the fund's portfolio. The markets may go against the managed fund, which could lead to losses. Some managed funds may also carry additional risks based on the type of assets they invest in.

What is the average return on an investment account 2022? ›

The S&P 500 average return over the past 10 years
YearS&P 500 annual return
201931.5%
202018.4%
202128.7%
2022-18.1%
6 more rows
Sep 18, 2023

How did investments perform in 2022? ›

The 2022 stock market decline was an economic event involving a decline in stock markets globally. The decline was the worst for American stock indices since 2008, ending three-years of gains. In February 2022, the Russian invasion of Ukraine caused a sell-off across many financial markets throughout the world.

Did the PSP sell well? ›

The PSP managed over 80 million sales and was extremely successful, while it didn't reach the heights of the DS, it still goes down as one of the best, and most innovative devices in gaming history. And with its success came a lot of things it did better than its competitors.

How did investments do in 2022? ›

The much maligned 60/40 portfolio was down -16% in 2022, the worst return when stocks were not down more than -25% going back to 1940. Investor sentiment across a number of metrics also touched all-time lows, though depressed sentiment luckily didn't impact the consumer's willingness to spend.

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