Pension Pulse

A Discussion With OPTrust's CIO Going Over Their 2025 Results

Freschia Gonzalez of Benefits and Pensions Monitor reports OPTrust marks 30 years with 17th straight fully funded result:

Seventeen years of full funding and three decades in operation put OPTrust in a small club of Canadian defined benefit plans that have delivered on their promises through multiple market cycles. 

OPTrust’s 2025 Funded Status Report, Service & Security – Since 1995, confirms the OPSEU Pension Plan remained fully funded for the 17th consecutive year. On a funding basis at 31 December 2025, the Plan reported an actuarial value of assets of $27.9bn against liabilities of $27.7bn, for a surplus of $199m. 

Financial‑statement figures show net assets available for benefits of $27.2bn, pension obligations of $22.5bn and an accounting surplus of $4.7bn. 

The funding valuation uses a 2.80 percent real discount rate (4.80 percent nominal), down from 2.90 percent (4.90 percent nominal) in 2024. That change alone added about $562m to liabilities, but OPTrust still held its fully funded position. 

The valuation also identified $708m in deferred investment losses to be recognised over four years, using asset smoothing to support stability in future valuations. 

On the asset side, OPTrust posted a 4.2 percent net Total Portfolio return in 2025.  

The five‑year average net return stands at 6.3 percent, the 10‑year at 6.7 percent, and the since‑inception average at 7.8 percent. Investment returns now account for more than 70 percent of the benefits OPTrust pays to members when they retire. 

Peter Lindley, president and chief executive officer of OPTrust, said that “in a year shaped by economic uncertainty and geopolitical tensions,” the Plan’s results reflected its diversified investment approach. 

He said their role as a long‑term investor allows them to “look beyond short‑term uncertainty” and focus on keeping the Plan sustainable over the decades ahead. 

The asset mix pairs a large illiquid allocation with a sizeable liquid book. Illiquid assets – private equity, infrastructure, real estate and an incubation portfolio – represented 54.2 percent of the portfolio and returned ‑0.8 percent in 2025, but 10.4 percent over five years and 12.3 percent over 10 years.  

Within that, private equity (18.7 percent of assets) returned 4.6 percent, infrastructure (17.9 percent) 1.9 percent and real estate (16.9 percent) ‑8.5 percent. 

Liquid assets accounted for 61.2 percent of the portfolio and returned 10.5 percent. Government bonds (27.3 percent) returned 0.8 percent. Public equity (16.6 percent) delivered 18.2 percent, credit (3.2 percent) 5.7 percent, Absolute Return Strategies (8.0 percent) 9.7 percent and commodities (6.1 percent) 45.0 percent, reflecting strong gold performance.  

The Funding Portfolio, which manages liquidity and uses moderate leverage, showed a weight of ‑15.4 percent, indicating balance sheet leverage at the total‑fund level. 

2025 also marked the first full year of a structural shift in public markets. OPTrust combined eight separate programmes into a single Liquid Completion Portfolio under its Member‑Driven Investing strategy, its version of a Total Portfolio Approach.  

The new portfolio, managed centrally by the Total Portfolio Management group, returned 20.3 percent and generated $1.6bn in profits in its first year. 

On the liability side, the report shows 117,895 members and retirees at year‑end: 55,510 active members, 17,962 former members with entitlements and 44,423 pensioners.  

Active members had an average age of 43.4 and average salary of $78,563. Retirees had an average age of 74.5 and received an average annual pension of $25,636.  

In 2025, OPTrust paid $1,417m in benefits and received $716m in contributions. 

The 2025 cost‑of‑living adjustment was 2.0 percent for both the primary schedule and OPTrust Select. 

Under the primary schedule, pensions in pay and deferred pensions automatically receive inflation adjustments.  

Under OPTrust Select, the Board may grant inflation‑related increases on a discretionary basis. 

According to the report, a retiree who started a $20,000 pension in January 1995 would receive $38,059 starting January 2026, a 90 percent increase over 31 years. 

Service metrics remained strong. Members rated OPTrust’s service 8.6 out of 10 in 2025, and CEM Benchmarking ranked the organisation among the top 10 pension plans globally for service.  

The Member Experience and Pension Operations team handled about 48,000 phone calls and supported roughly 73,500 life events, while recalculating benefits for about 61,000 members and former members who received retroactive salary increases dating back to 2022. 

Responsible investing and climate remain embedded in the strategy.  

OPTrust reports that it met all 2025 targets under its climate change strategy, now four years into a net‑zero‑aligned program launched in 2022.  

Between 2023 and 2024, the Plan achieved a 23 percent reduction in its carbon footprint through decarbonisation in several carbon‑intensive assets and changes in portfolio composition.  

In 2025, OPTrust voted at 700 company meetings in 30 countries, engaged 104 companies in 28 countries on ESG issues, and completed the fourth year of its COMPAS ESG data program to support investment monitoring and stewardship. 

Lindley said OPTrust was set up 30 years ago “to pay pensions today and preserve pensions for tomorrow.” He said the plan has been fully funded for 17 consecutive years and serves 118,000 members in retirement.  

On Wednesday, OPTrust released its 2025 Funded Status Report, stating it was fully funded for 17th consecutive year:

TORONTO, March 11, 2026 — Today, OPTrust released its 2025 Funded Status Report — Service & Security – Since 1995 — which details the Plan's financial results and funded status, while marking its 30th anniversary. In 2025, OPTrust remained fully funded for the 17th consecutive year and achieved a net investment return of 4.2 per cent. Over the past 10 years, the Plan's average net investment return is 6.7 per cent.

“Thirty years ago, OPTrust was founded with a mission to pay pensions today, and preserve pensions for tomorrow,” said Peter Lindley, President and CEO of OPTrust. “As OPTrust remains fully funded for the 17th consecutive year, we continue to fulfil that purpose for our 118,000 members, delivering income security and peace of mind in retirement.”

Since starting operations in 1995, OPTrust’s membership has grown by more than 70 per cent, and assets have increased nearly fivefold. Today, investment returns account for more than 70 per cent of the benefits paid to OPTrust members when they retire, with over $1.4 billion in entitlements paid in 2025. The Plan’s average annual net investment return since inception is 7.8 per cent.

“In a year shaped by economic uncertainty and geopolitical tensions, the continued strength of the Plan is a testament to our diversified investment strategy guided by an experienced investment team,” said Lindley. “Our perspective as a long-term investor allows us to look beyond short-term uncertainty, and to stay focused on the sustainability of the Plan over the decades to come.”

OPTrust continues to provide exceptional service to members, who rated their service satisfaction as 8.6 out of 10. The Plan was recognized among the top 10 pension plans globally for service by CEM Benchmarking Inc.'s annual rankings.

Find more information about OPTrust's 2025 strategy and results in Service & Security – Since 1995 at optrust.com.

About OPTrust

With net assets of over $27 billion, OPTrust invests and manages one of Canada's largest pension funds and administers the OPSEU Pension Plan (including OPTrust Select), a defined benefit plan with 118,000 members. OPTrust was established to give plan members and the Government of Ontario an equal voice in the administration of the Plan and the investment of its assets through joint trusteeship. OPTrust is governed by a 10-member Board of Trustees, five of whom are appointed by OPSEU/SEFPO and five by the Government of Ontario.

 Before I get to my discussion with James Davis, some high-level comments.

First, a message from Chair Richard Nesbitt and Vice-Chair Ram Selvarajah:

 

I note:

The Board continues to oversee OPTrust’s five-year strategic plan, now in its fourth year. The transformation of our pension administration system and processes through the PATH initiative is progressing well and remains on track for rollout in 2027. We are also advancing our climate change strategy, now four years in, with climate considerations integrated into core investment processes as part of our ambition to achieve a net-zero portfolio by 2050.

Modernization efforts across the organization — including the thoughtful use of AI tools — are strengthening our capabilities and enhancing collaboration in a hybrid work environment. At the same time, we are investing in our people, fostering learning and career growth to build a durable foundation for the decades ahead. 

Next, a message from CEO Peter Lindley:

I note the following (shorter version form here):

Thirty years ago, OPTrust was founded with a clear purpose: to provide secure, reliable pensions for our members. Today, that purpose remains unchanged, though the world around us has evolved dramatically.

Navigating a complex landscape

The past year has been shaped by economic uncertainty and geopolitical tensions that continue to influence markets and the Canadian economy. In this environment, resilience matters. OPTrust is fully funded for the 17th consecutive year, consistent with our long-term objectives.

Putting members first

Our members count on us for more than investment performance – they trust us for guidance and support through every stage of their careers and into retirement. We are advancing the modernization of our pension administration system to continue supporting our members now and into the future. This modernization project, called PATH, will transform how we serve them.

Building for the future

We are in the fourth year of our five-year strategic plan, seeing strong progress in enhancing Plan sustainability, investing in our people and strengthening our capabilities. In an ever-changing world, being strategic means embracing innovation in a thoughtful way. We are piloting AI tools to enhance efficiency and collaboration, with careful attention to governance and security. Combined with modernization efforts like PATH, these initiatives are creating a stronger, more agile organization that is ready to meet the needs of tomorrow. 

I am proud of what OPTrust has accomplished and energized by what lies ahead. Our focus remains clear: delivering pensions today and preserving pensions for tomorrow. That commitment has guided us for 30 years, and it will continue to guide us for decades to come.-- Peter Lindley

Next, some highlights from OPTrust's 2025 year:


 Here are the membership statistics for OPTrust:

The key thing here is that the ratio of active to retired workers is 1.25 so OPTrust is a more mature plan and needs to manage risks more closely.

The real discount rate dropped in 2025 from 2.9% to 2.8%, "reflecting a more conservative estimate
of investment returns, adds prudence to the funding assumptions, helping to ensure the Plan will be ready to tackle future challenges":

The following from pages 22 and 23 of the 2025 Funded Status Report are very important to read and understand because it situates readers on their member-driven investment journey and philosophy and why they implemented a total portfolio approach across public markets last year:

 

Worth noting this:

The early impact of the new model was evident in 2025 results. The Liquid Completion Portfolio generated a 20.3 per cent return, delivering $1.6 billion in total profits in the first year of implementation. 

The plan's total portfolio performance is best gauged over a longer period, returning 6.7% annualized over a 10-year period:

And the table below shows OPTrust's asset mix and returns by asset class as at the end of 2025:

As you can see, 54.2% of the assets are in illiquid private markets and 61.2% in liquid (public) markets (doesn't add up to 100% because they used leverage in liquid markets).

Real estate had a tough year, and James and I discussed this below, but strong returns in public equity, commodities and absolute return strategies helped them post a positive return. 

Lastly, OPTrust manages 74% of its assets internally to reduce costs and is well diversified internationally but also has excellent domestic exposure:

Alright, I provided a good overview of the key highlights for 2025. 

Discussion With OPTrust CIO James Davis  

Earlier today, I had a discussion with OPTrust CIO James Davis, going over their 2025 results.

I want to thank him for taking the time to talk to me and also thank Jason White for sending me material and setting up this virtual meeting.

James began by giving me an in-depth overview covering everything in detail:

Well, the first thing I want to point out is that this is the 30th anniversary at OPTrust. It's also the 10th anniversary of our member-driven investment strategy and my 10th anniversary here at OPTrust. 

It's kind of a very opportune time to reflect on our investment performance at OPTrust in general. And I thought what I would do is give you a little bit of colour, since it is the 10th anniversary of our member-driven investment strategy, on how well that's done. That was introduced in 2015 and really what it was designed to do was to focus our plan on what the real objective is, which is sustainability, being able to pay pensions today and preserve pensions for tomorrow, which, you know, is our mission. 

And that's the metric that matters. The North Star for us is our funded status. So our investment strategy is very liability aware, and our North Star is the funded status. We are a pension plan, so we invest for the very long term. Our liabilities are long-term, and so we make investment decisions with that in mind, again, with the primary objective of improving plan sustainability. 

One thing I did want to point out is key to MDI is avoiding unnecessary risks. So recognizing we are mature we don't want to take risks unnecessarily. In fact, we only want to pursue risks purposefully and efficiently, striving for resilience. 

We also take a total portfolio approach, and I know that's becoming very, very popular now; people are talking about it a lot. We were an early adopter, and why I think that's so important is it breaks down silos within the overall organization. That's not just within the Investment division, but across the entire organization. It does recognize that risk is a scarce resource and it has to be shared, and as I mentioned, has to be taken purposefully and efficiently. It supports agility, which is really important, especially in the private markets, and it ensures alignment, and our alignment is within the overall organization, towards overall improvement of plan sustainability. 

So with that in mind, and then, you know, looking over the past 10 years, I think our MBI strategy has performed very well. We have a 6.7% rate of return over that 10-year period, which is above the return that we would need to preserve pensions today and or pay patients today and preserve pensions for tomorrow. And it's also ensured that we have remained fully funded. 

In fact, we're fully funded for the 17th consecutive year, as you would know from our funded status report. But perhaps what's not as well understood is we're the best funded we've ever been in history, in the history of the plan, going all the way back 30 years. And we've been able to reduce our discount rate to 2.8%, the lowest it's been in that 30-year period. And that's a real rate of return, so we've been able to build margins, and that adds conservatism to our overall plan. 

Now, one thing that's key to our MDI strategy is that we purposefully overweight illiquid assets. We have an abundance of liquidity, and we believe by investing in the liquid asset space, we have the best opportunities for value creation, and we get to harvest illiquidity premium over time. 

Now, all that being said, that's not always going to work in any particular year and 2025 is a challenging year for us, primarily because of our illiquid asset exposure. 

If you look at private markets, and in particular, I'm going to call on private equity, the reason we like illiquid markets is our private equity portfolio. Looking back to 2014, which is the numbers I have at hand, we've outperformed public equity by 6.2% per year, and over the last 10 years, it's been by more than 7% a year. That's one of the reasons why we're really in that space. It hasn't been the strongest performer within our illiquid portfolio last year in 2025 returning 4.6% It's also worthwhile noting that that is the lowest private equity return we've had in 12 years, and it's also a reflection of the current market environment where the liquidity is actually being penalized, and where there has not been a lot of deal flow and and what you're seeing is what I believe is a correction in the private markets in time, instead of in price. 

And that's a term we use in public markets all the time but I think it's actually appropriate in private markets as well. And if you do look over the last 12 years, in 9 of the past 12 years, our private equity asset class has achieved double-digit returns, with the highest return being in 2021 with a 52.2% rate of return. So that's one of the reasons why I like private equity and private market assets. But as I mentioned, they've been challenged. 

Let me talk very briefly about infrastructure, which has also been challenged, a 1.9% rate of return, which is low, lower than what we would expect in that particular asset class. But I got to put it in the context of the kind of returns we've had historically. And again, what's been going on in overall markets in 2021 and 2022 our infrastructure returns were 33% and 21.1% respectively. But again, deal activities literally ground to a halt, and we have a large exposure to renewables, and renewables have fallen out of favor. Part of that is an oversupply, but higher, longer-term interest rates also weigh on that particular sector of the infrastructure asset class as well. 

I do believe that renewables will recover and do very well. The energy challenges that we have and the need for more energy are not going away, and renewables are a solution, but it's just a period in time where it hasn't been working as well as it has historically. 

Probably the one you want me to touch on most is real estate, so maybe I'll weigh in a little bit of that. If you look at our overall investment returns and those of our peers, over the last several years, real estate has been a really challenging asset class, and we really reflected that in our 2025 results with a minus 8.5% rate of return. And so why is that happening? I think for us anyway, it's a function of the asset class in general, but it's also because we had some exposure to development assets which we had acquired before or around the time of COVID and things happened in the market that made development really, really challenging. 

One of the things that you had was supply-side, shocks and the cost of materials for construction went up. The cost of labor went up when COVID hit. You had problems. Can you imagine, you know, trying to pour concrete flooring and you have to socially distance by six feet with people that you're actually constructed in the building with so you have had challenges there. Then we know what happened in the office sector, and we know that the retail sector was challenged as well. 

Now we, earlier in this decade, benefited in our real estate portfolio by being overweight multi-residential and industrial that served us very, very well, and our long-term returns in real estate have been very strong. But what's happened is these development assets have been problematic for us, and we really reflected that in our real estate returns this year. 

So we're working through those challenges. And you know, we're optimistic that this is a great asset class for us to own. It continues to turn out great cash flow, is a good inflation hedge, relatively stable, but we are making some changes in how we think about investing in our liquid assets. So happy to share more about that in just a few minutes, if you want to dig in more on our approach to TPA.

But within, within the overall portfolio, what was the shining star? Our liquid portfolio, and our liquid portfolio did particularly well, primarily because of our exposure to gold and to equities. But it's more than that. 

Last year, we made a strategic change in the way we manage our liquid assets. You may recall that our liquid portfolio acts like a completion portfolio. And so we look at the overall risk profile we get from our illiquid assets, we look at what we need for our plan liabilities and what's happening in the macroeconomic environment, and adjust the liquid markets allocations accordingly. The team has a lot of flexibility there, they can do so within the illiquid asset space, they can go to where they think the best opportunities lie at any particular point line. We did not have a lot of credit exposure. We did, instead, choose to be in equities and in commodities, mostly gold, that, as I mentioned, did serve us particularly well. 

One thing that doesn't actually get reflected when you look at the returns in our liquid portfolio, to the extent that it probably should, because returns don't tell the story, and that's our bond portfolio. We have a significant portion of the portfolio and longer maturity government bonds. That's by design. That's our liability hedge portfolio that reflects our plan maturity, and it goes directly to our metric that matters, our North Star, which is the funded status. 

To the extent that you know interest rates go up, you will have disappointing performance in your long bond portfolio, but you will also have reduced liabilities, and similarly, when the opposite happens. So, we do view that as a stabilizer in the overall portfolio, and are willing to tolerate some drag on returns as a result of holding those assets. So I'm going to pause there, because I'm sure you want to dig in a little bit more.

James covered it well and I began by asking him in public equities if they use the MSCI ACWI Index and he responded:

I don't want to say we're benchmark agnostic. We do pay attention to what the indices are doing, because in many cases, we are getting our public equity exposure through index positions, but we're quite dynamic in that space. And as I mentioned, the public markets team, which is our liquid asset class team, or what we call our total portfolio management team, they can move things around quite significantly, and they can do so with a great amount of agility. 

So, last year, we reduced our exposure early on in the first quarter of 2025, and we did use the opportunity to add to our equity exposure once we got a clearer sense of where the tariff situation was appearing to land. 

And so we did the same thing throughout the course of the years. We've had exposures as high as 7% in gold and then as low as 3% in gold. So the team is quite dynamic. There is no gold in our benchmark. We don't think about it that way at all. What we do think about is absolute returns and what we need to pay pensions. 

I told James there used to be a risk-mitigation portfolio at OPTrust that invested in gold, commodities, USD, etc. and asked if that's still in place. 

He replied:

We still think about it that way, but we report in a way that we thought was simpler. There was some confusion around thinking about risk within the risk mitigation portfolio, not recognizing that our overall funded status and the volatility that funded status depends on all of the assets that are in the portfolio. 

So given that our goal is stability and sustainability of the plan, we thought calling a one small segment of the portfolio, which is about 10% of the assets, and saying that represents the risk mitigation portfolio, was probably not telling the full story, but the concept is still there. 

Gold is still viewed as a risk mitigation asset. Our liability hedge portfolio was viewed as a risk-mitigating asset, but we didn't call it that specifically within our risk mitigation portfolio historically. So that's why we report on that slightly differently 

So, the completion portfolio is not the risk mitigation portfolio? He answered:

No, but what it is designed to do is it's designed to complete the overall risk profile of the portfolio. So think of it this way, if there are no opportunities that are presenting themselves in the illiquid asset space, or if we can't get the risk factor exposure that we want in our illiquid asset space, we'll go to the liquid asset space and look for those opportunities. 

So if our private equity portfolio exposure is dropping, we would be adding public equities to the portfolio, assuming we still wanted that equity or that growth risk factor in the overall portfolio. You got you 

 I asked James if it's still 50/50 public /private now and he replied:

It's very close to that, as I say, that the public market equities have moved around, given the volatility over 2025, but if you look at it in general, we're probably somewhere around 15 to 18% on average, sometimes a little bit lower than 15 in public equities, and our private equities are around 17- 18% as well.

On Credit, James shared some very interesting insights: 

We're not big in private credit. I have some concerns with private credit. I think it's my view personally. I realize it's it's been a desirable asset class. You know, in many ways, it's disintermediated in the banks. Its growth has been driven by changes in regulatory policy, but it seems to be overhyped. I mean, I go to conferences, and that's all everybody's talking about, so it's an area that I've avoided.  

The other thing to keep in mind is the way we approach our private market assets; the teams can invest across the capital stack. So if there is a better opportunity in the credit space than there is in the equity space, they can take advantage of that. But we do not have an allocation. I don't have a core allocation to our sort of long-term acceptable risk portfolio, and it's not something that we would target when we sit look at the overall environment, say, 'Yeah, we want to, you know, we want to move 5% from here to there'. It's very opportunistic.

He added:

Where we do have credit exposure, which is minimal, in the public space, we would tend to do it either through CDX or through external managers, but in the private market space, to be very unique, would be specific to a particular deal. 

We then shifted to sustainable investing where James had this to share:

There's been a lot going on, as you are probably aware in the last several years on the responsible investing side of things, and so we've approached this in a couple of ways. First, we wanted to get metrics in place, which we did earlier, a few years ago, and then we had set what we felt was a pretty ambitious objective to reduce our overall carbon footprint. Which we did, we had reduced it between 2023 and 2024 I think, by 23% and we've continued our progress in responsible investing, but more with a focus on gathering data from our portfolio companies and from our partners.

For us to advance further and to have more influence and impact within our overall portfolio, we have to work with our partners, and we have to have data. So we need much more evidence-based and data-driven in our overall climate change strategy. So that's been the focus. 

We've also launched a taxonomy, a climate change taxonomy, which, to me, I think is really special. It's not focused on numbers. And quite frankly, I think, you know, focusing too much on numbers in the climate space can be misleading, but what it does tell you is what exposures we have in the plan, what assets in the plan are most exposed, and what assets are doing something about it. 

And so it's qualitative, but it does help us to identify at a higher level where the largest risks are within the plan and what we might where we might want to engage more so we continue to try to improve. It's our mantra of excellence and continuous improvement. We try to do that across the portfolio, but climate change.

I told him the federal government is trying to open up more opportunities in infrastructure investing and asked if that is something that interests OPTrust. 

He replied: 

For sure? We do have a significant exposure to Canada already, more than a third of the fund of I think it's about 36% or something, of the fund is in Canada right now. And there's nothing that would make me happier than to invest more and more in Canada if we could find the opportunities. And so the fact that the government is working with the pension plans and the private sector to try to make the environment more friendly for long-term capital investment. This is a wonderful thing.  

And if you think about Ontario as a whole, I mean, our members are in Ontario, the benefits that they are getting, they're spending that money in Ontario. So this is the economic benefit. Regardless of where those returns come from, they're going to go into our members' hands, and they're going to get multiplied throughout the overall economy

Wouldn't it even be better, the extent that we could get even more assets here? But it has to make sense. It has to make sense for us. And so to the extent that we can support government and policy makers to make a better environment for investing in Canada. You know, we're all over that.  

On membership, James shared this:

It's growing, I mean, it's partly in the public service. You're not expecting the same degree of growth, especially, you know, in this kind of an environment, but we are seeing both membership is improving, and that's a positive for us, but we are mindful. We are a mature plan, and we do have more retirees and deferred retirees than we do active members, and that's not going to change for some time. 

Lastly, we spoke about the challenges in private equity where I noted there's enormous competition there and across the private markets so maybe there is a structural change going on, and it will be increasingly harder to harvest returns of the past there.

James replied:

To start with, let me say that I remain very confident in the ability of that asset class to perform well. I would call out that there remains a lot of dry powder, a lot of investors are still looking to move into that space. 

As I mentioned, I think the market is correcting more in time than it is in price. I think some further correction in price would probably be welcome, because I think it would help unfreeze the market and improve/ move deal activity. So that'd be number one. 

Number two, we know that there is a move afoot to private markets, to other investors, whether it's over 401K or other retail-type investors in the United States, that will provide another source of demand. I'm not sure how it will impact overall returns and whether certain segments of the market will do worse or better, but it is an additional source of returns. 

The third thing, which I think is important, though, and I don't hear a whole lot about it, is to what degree will tokenization and the blockchain potentially impact the private markets. I think there is something there. I think we will begin to see assets slowly going on the blockchain, and there will be more price discovery, more price transparency. What I don't know, though, is, does that destroy the information asymmetry that you have now in that space. 

And I mean, that's where the value creation, that's a huge part of the value creation, is that you know your first call, and you've got access to deals, or you just happen to be you have great relationships in that space where you see things that others would not, and you're able to capitalize them on them. But if the market becomes more symmetric and more transparent, then that opportunity is going to go away.

Great food for thought, I always enjoy speaking with James, he's a really sharp and experienced CIO who has dabbled in meteorology in the past.

Alright, let me thank James and Jason once again. It was a really long week for me with back-to-back interviews and coverage and I need to rest.

Below, a member profile from OPTrust. Also, Audrey Forbes, Member Experience and Pension Operations, OPTrust who retired in June 2023, discusses the importance of taking care of members:

“I’m passionate about pensions because the vast majority of the people the industry serves could otherwise fall through the cracks without a pension. Many of these individuals could end up in poverty at retirement.

That’s why I love the public sector pension model—it provides financial security for many people who wouldn’t typically achieve it. In many ways, it’s an equalizer in the workplace, irrespective of colour, ethnicity or other demographic factors.”

Remember, it's all about members, that's why pensions exist to take care of their members. 

A Discussion With HOOPP's CFO and CIO on Their 2025 Results

James Bradshaw of the Globe and Mail reports HOOPP rides stocks to 7.7% gain as market turbulence weighs on private assets:

The Healthcare of Ontario Pension Plan leaned heavily on strong stock markets to report a 7.7-per-cent investment gain last year, even as returns from private markets were sluggish against a turbulent economic backdrop.

HOOPP’s one-year results trailed the benchmark return that the plan uses to measure its performance, which was 8.6 per cent. That relative underperformance was partly attributed to challenges with two specific investments – one in infrastructure and another in private credit.

But a 22.2-per-cent return from HOOPP’s portfolio of publicly traded stocks, which it bulked up last year after U.S. President Donald Trump announced broad and punitive tariffs, kept the plan’s investment gains near their longer-term average.

Over 10 years, HOOPP’s average annual return was 7.8 per cent.

Net assets increased to $132-billion last year, from $123-billion a year earlier. The plan is 109-per-cent funded, meaning it has $1.09 for every dollar it expects to pay out in pensions.

The fallout from tariffs and a period of high inflation undermined some of the bedrock economic assumptions that long-term investors such as pension plans have relied on for years. At the same time, valuations for private assets such as real estate and private equity came under pressure as buyers and sellers struggled to agree on prices and deal-making slowed.

“It was obviously a year full of lots of complexity,” HOOPP chief executive officer Annesley Wallace said in an interview. “Particularly in that context, we feel good about the 7.7-per-cent return.”

HOOPP invests on behalf of more than 504,000 members and 870 employers in Ontario’s health care sector, including nurses, medical technicians and, more recently, physicians.

In infrastructure – typically one of the most stable asset classes, producing steady cash flows – a single HOOPP investment in the U.S. renewable energy sector ran into problems. That dragged down the portfolio’s return, which was 1.8 per cent last year, underscoring the volatility in renewable energy after the Trump administration reversed course on climate policies and offshore wind development.

HOOPP did not name the problematic infrastructure investment.

Similarly, in private credit, HOOPP’s 0.9-per-cent annual return was hampered by “issuer-specific performance challenges in a single credit investment,” according to the pension plan’s annual report released on Tuesday.

Investors have been jittery about private credit as a number of lenders have grappled with ways to meet clients’ requests for redemptions, most recently U.S. giants such as Blue Owl Capital Inc. and Blackstone Inc.

“We see opportunity in private credit,” Ms. Wallace said, but she emphasized the importance of “being disciplined” about where to make loans.

All of HOOPP’s portfolios of private assets ended the year with positive returns, with private equity gaining 3.6 per cent and real estate up 1.1 per cent.

The pension plan ended 2025 with 49 per cent of its assets invested in Canada and 29 per cent in the United States.

Ms. Wallace said the plan is keen to make more Canadian-based investments if the right deals are available, some of which might be smaller in scale and faster to get off the ground than the major, nation-building projects that the federal government has flagged for fast-track approvals.

“There’s lots of active discussions,” she said.

HOOPP is also defe`nding a years-long dispute with Dutch tax authorities over transactions in the Netherlands from 2013 to 2018. A Dutch court ruled that HOOPP wrongly claimed about $340-million of dividend tax refunds through a trading strategy that took advantage of the pension fund’s favourable tax status in the country. HOOPP is appealing the decision.

“We continue to defend ourselves against those allegations,” Ms. Wallace said. “We have very strong governance and risk management.”

In recent weeks, the Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec reported a 9.3-per-cent gain for 2025, the Ontario Municipal Employees Retirement System (OMERS) was up 6 per cent and Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan reported a 6.7-per-cent return on Tuesday. 

On Tuesday, HOOPP announced it delivered strong 2025 results for Ontario’s healthcare community:

  • Net assets reach $132 billion, with nearly half invested in Canada, and membership now exceeding 500,000

TORONTO, March 10, 2026 — The Healthcare of Ontario Pension Plan’s net assets grew to $132 billion at the end of 2025, up from $123 billion at the end of 2024. The Fund’s net return was 7.7%, and net investment income was $9.7 billion. The Plan’s funded status was 109% at the end of the year, underscoring its financial resilience and long-term ability to meet pension commitments to Ontario’s healthcare community.

HOOPP’s 10-year annualized net return was 7.8%, exceeding its 10-year benchmark of 5.9%, consistent with the absolute long-term returns required to meet the pension promise.

“Our strong results reflect the strength of our foundation, including our scale, disciplined investment approach, independent governance model and, most importantly, our people,” said Annesley Wallace, HOOPP’s President and CEO. “In an increasingly complex investment environment, we remained focused on prudent risk management and long-term value creation. Looking ahead, we are well positioned to protect the Plan’s strength and continue delivering sustainable retirement security for Ontario’s healthcare community.”

Portfolio performance

The 2025 results reflect performance across a diversified portfolio. The Fund maintained significant exposure to public equities and fixed income, supporting liquidity, flexibility and disciplined risk management amid shifting market conditions. Returns were driven by public equities, reflecting resilient corporate earnings and more accommodative monetary policy later in the year. Fixed income delivered stable income and performed well as interest rates declined, with shorter-duration bonds benefiting from rate cuts by the Bank of Canada. Private markets generated positive, though more moderate, returns in a challenging valuation environment.

Investing in Canada

A strategic foundation of HOOPP’s portfolio is its strong domestic presence. Approximately 49% of the Fund is invested in Canada across public equities, fixed income, infrastructure, real estate and private credit. This long-term investment approach supports economic activity at home while maintaining global diversification aligned with HOOPP’s pension obligations.

“Our results reflect the strength of a globally diversified portfolio, with a significant portion invested in Canada,” said Wallace. “We are proud to invest in the communities where our members live and work, while maintaining the global reach and discipline required to deliver on our long-term pension commitments.”

Serving a growing healthcare community

HOOPP surpassed 504,000 members and 870 employers in 2025, reflecting continued growth across Ontario’s healthcare sector. During the year, the Plan welcomed The Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids), achieving 100% participation across Ontario hospitals and expanded eligibility to incorporated physicians. In 2025, HOOPP paid out $4.1 billion in pension benefits, providing dependable retirement income and generating meaningful economic activity across Ontario.

Strategic progress

In 2025, HOOPP launched its 2030 Strategic Plan, a forward-looking roadmap focused on strengthening retirement security for Ontario’s healthcare community in an increasingly complex global environment. The strategy advances HOOPP’s vision of building a stronger financial future for members while maintaining a secure and sustainable Plan. The strategy sets out three priorities: maximizing value for members, improving the adaptability and resilience of the portfolio and evolving with Ontario’s healthcare community. It is an ambitious roadmap that strengthens HOOPP’s foundation today while preparing the Plan for the opportunities and challenges of tomorrow.

2025 financial highlights
  • Net assets: $132 billion
  • Net return: 7.7% (5.3% real return)
  • Net investment income: $9.7 billion
  • 10-year annualized net return: 7.8%
  • Funded status: 109%
  • Canadian investments: 49% of portfolio
  • Carbon footprint reduced by 37% compared to 2021 baseline
  • Membership: 504,000+ members, 870+ employers
  • Pension benefits paid: $4.1 billion
  • Cost-of-living adjustment (COLA): 100% CPI granted for eligible service
  • Contribution rates unchanged since 2004: 6.9% on earnings up to the Year’s Maximum Pensionable Earnings (YMPE) and 9.2% on earnings above the YMPE

The full 2025 Annual Report is available at Plan performance.

About the Healthcare of Ontario Pension Plan

HOOPP serves Ontario's hospital and community-based healthcare sector, with more than 870 participating employers. Its membership includes nurses, medical technicians, food services staff, housekeeping staff, physicians and many others who provide valued healthcare services. In total, HOOPP has more than 504,000 active, deferred and retired members.

HOOPP is fully funded and manages a highly diversified portfolio of $132 billion in assets that span multiple geographies and asset classes. HOOPP is also a major contributor to the Canadian economy, paying more than $4.1 billion in pension benefits annually.

HOOPP operates as a private independent trust, and its Board of Trustees governs the Plan and Fund, focusing on HOOPP's mission to deliver on our pension promise. The Board is made up of appointees from the Ontario Hospital Association (OHA) and four unions: the Ontario Nurses' Association (ONA), the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE), the Ontario Public Service Employees' Union (OPSEU) and the Service Employees International Union (SEIU). This governance model provides representation from both employers and members in support of the long-term interests of the Plan.

Please take the time to read HOOPP's 2025 annual report here and highlights for members here.

Below is the table of contents for the annual report:

 


I think it's worth reading Chair Anthony Dale and Vice-Chair Dan Anderson's message:


 

I note the following:

Both the healthcare and investment landscapes continue to evolve amid significant and ongoing changes. Demand for healthcare services across Ontario is steadily increasing, shaped by demographic shifts and growing complexity of care. At the same time, the global economy continues to be shaped by persistent inflationary pressures, heightened geopolitical risk and accelerated technological disruption. In this environment, HOOPP’s long‑term focus, agility and organizational stability are more important than ever.

Throughout 2025, the Board played a pivotal role in ensuring HOOPP continued to adapt and meet future needs. The launch of HOOPP’s 2030 Strategic Plan marked an important milestone. Developed with contributions from the Board and employees across the organization, the plan sets a clear direction for the next five years. It ensures HOOPP will continue to evolve alongside the healthcare sector it serves, so the Plan remains resilient, responsive and aligned with the needs of current and future members. 

As well as this: 

In early 2025, the Board appointed Annesley Wallace as HOOPP’s President and Chief Executive Officer and supported her seamless onboarding, ensuring strong continuity in executive leadership and positioning the organization for continued success. Annesley brings a distinguished track record of leadership in investment management and pension administration and is well equipped to advance HOOPP’s mandate of delivering secure, lifelong pensions to Ontario’s healthcare workers. 

The Board is confident that, under Annesley’s leadership, HOOPP’s strategy, governance framework and dedicated team will continue to effectively navigate future opportunities and challenges, while safeguarding and enhancing the value of the Plan

The Board also extends its sincere gratitude to Jeff Wendling, who retired in 2025 after more than 26 years of dedicated service to HOOPP, including five years as President and Chief Executive Officer. Under Jeff’s leadership, the Plan maintained a strong funded status, navigated significant market challenges and maintained stable contribution rates while enhancing member benefits. 

Next, read CEO Annesley Wallace's message:


 

I note the following:

The launch of HOOPP’s 2030 Strategic Plan marks the beginning of an important new chapter in our journey. Built on decades of financial strength and operational discipline, the strategic plan provides a roadmap for navigating an increasingly complex world while
remaining focused on delivering retirement security for our members.

The strategy is anchored by three core pillars: 

  •  Maximizing the value of the Plan for members by enhancing the benefits and services that matter most, while recognizing today’s realities.
  • Improving the resilience and adaptability of the portfolio through a Total Portfolio Approach (TPA) to investing that balances long‑term returns with flexibility in a rapidly changing environment. 
  • Evolving with Ontario’s healthcare community by thoughtfully growing our membership and ensuring HOOPP remains the pension plan of choice for healthcare workers and employers across the province.

Maximizing the value of the Plan for members

HOOPP’s strong funded position enabled us to provide a full cost‑of‑living adjustment for 2024, helping retired members maintain their standard of living amid rising costs. We also maintained contribution rates that are among the lowest of Canada’s major pension plans.

In June, we announced that these rates will remain stable until at least the end of 2027, extending a remarkable record of unchanged rates since 2004. This long‑term stability remains one of the most meaningful ways we support affordability, predictability and retirement confidence for both members and employers.

Improving the resilience and adaptability of the portfolio

As higher interest rates, geopolitical shifts and technological change reshape global markets, we are evolving how we invest. Our transition to TPA reflects an evolution in how we allocate capital and manage risk across the Fund. This more integrated and flexible
framework strengthens decision making, improves our ability to respond to changes and supports sustainable long‑term value creation, ensuring the portfolio remains resilient through market cycles.

Evolving with Ontario’s healthcare community

2025 was a period of meaningful growth for HOOPP. We welcomed our 500,000th member, a milestone that reflects the continued strength of the Plan. Earlier in the year, Waterloo Regional Health Network expanded HOOPP eligibility to allow all employees to join the Plan, demonstrating the Plan’s growing reach. This momentum continued with The Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids) joining HOOPP effective December 29, 2025. This was a significant achievement that means all hospitals in Ontario are now part of the Plan.

HOOPP employer —The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto HOOPP employer — Centenary Hospital, Scarborough Health Network. Our network of participating healthcare employers has expanded to more than 870 across the province, including eligible incorporated physicians and their employees. Each new member and employer reinforces the value of a collective approach to retirement security and demonstrates that our strategy is working: expanding access, supporting those who care for others and building a stronger financial future for Ontario’s healthcare community.

Now, some high-level comments before I get to the discussion with Michael and Reena.

Clearly the 20230 strategic plan is critically important, so take the time to understand it: 


 The other thing that is important to note is HOOPP formalized its total portfolio approach (TPA) last year:

 

Now, in terms of total fund investment performance, HOOPP underperformed its benchmark in 2025 (7.7% vs 8.6%) but it's best to gauge it over the long term (10-year net annualized return of 7.8% vs benchmark of 5.9%):

In terms of asset class returns, all of them contributed positively last year:

The asset allocation is clearly weighted to capital markets (ie. public markets and a large exposure to Canada):

Interestingly, I didn't see a detailed breakdown of assets by asset class as of Dec 30th 2025 which is odd, but the HOOPP's Statement of Investment Principles and Procedures gives you the asset mix targets and ranges:

 

Still, I highly recommend that HOOPP follows best practices and posts its detailed asset mix as of the end of the calendar year, just like OTPP and others do (if I missed it, my bad).

The key thing to remember is HOOPP has a large fixed income portfolio and is more geared to public than private markets and has a lot more Canadian exposure than its peers (mostly owing to its fixed income portfolio). 

And asset mix is the main driver of performance.

What else is worth noting? As shown below, HOOPP’s ratio of active to retired members declined
gradually from 2.5 in 2005 to 2.2 in 2015 and remained unchanged at 2.2 at the end of 2025:

While the ratio has declined since 2005, HOOPP remains a relatively young plan relative to its peers.

Lastly, looking at HOOPP's Board, I see a few familiar faces like Debra Alves (former CEO at CBC Pension Plan), Julie Cays (former CIO at CAAT Pension Plan), Poul Winslow (former  Senior MD and Global Head of Capital Markets & Factor Investing at CPP Investments) and John Sinclair (former CEO at Vestcor): 

In short, HOOPP definitely has a very strong board of directors and good mix of experienced investment professionals and union representatives.

A strong Board is key to good governance. 

On governance, the only thing I'd like to see is more transparency at HOOPP.

For example, HOOPP is the only Maple 8 fund that does not publish a comprehensive compensation section in its annual report, going over what board directors make and what senior pension executives get compensated.

HOOPP will argue it's a private trust and doesn't need to disclose this information but I would argue its members and the public deserve to know exactly how much people are being compensated there since ultimately taxpayers backstop this pension plan if something goes wrong.

Anyway, there is a lot of great information in the annual report, but I'm a stickler for transparency at all our large Canadian pensions, the more transparency, the better.

Discussion With Reena Carter and Micahel Wissell

Alright, long preamble to my discussion with CFO Reena Carter and CIO Michael Wissell but the information above situates my readers well for the discussion below.

I want to thank Reena and Michael for taking the time to speak to me, and also thank Scott White for setting up the virtual meeting.

It was the first time I spoke to Reena. I want to apologize for calling her Rita during the meeting (I'm an idiot!) and make up for it by publicly apologizing and giving my readers a good background on her:

Reena Carter joined HOOPP in 2025 as Chief Financial Officer, bringing over 20 years of financial leadership experience within Canada’s pension industry.

Prior to joining HOOPP, Reena was Senior Managing Director of Portfolio Management and Operations at OMERS where she led all operational functions, portfolio construction and the sustainable investing strategy for OMERS Infrastructure globally. Before that, she served as Executive Vice President, Investment Finance & Valuations and Global Head of Assurance & Advisory, overseeing financial reporting, valuations, planning and internal audit for OMERS.

Reena also spent 13 years with Borealis Infrastructure where she held progressively senior finance roles, including Chief Financial Officer, managing key corporate functions and supporting global investment initiatives. She began her career at KPMG, working in both the assurance and advisory practices.

Reena has served on several boards and is currently on the board of Cymbria Corporation. She holds a Bachelor of Business Administration degree from the Schulich School of Business, York University and is a Chartered Professional Accountant, a Chartered Accountant, a Chartered Business Valuator and a Chartered Director.

Super nice and sharp lady who only began working at HOOPP in August. Glad to have met her virtually. 

Alright, I began by asking Michael to give me an overview of 2025 results which he did:

First and foremost, the point we always like to make is we are not in the money management business; we are in the pension delivery business. The plan is fully funded for the 16th year which we're really happy about. We feel that we have a good return, a solid return at 7.7%, but being fully funded is really what we're focused on. And that's three decent years in a row coming down with COVID. So that worked out well.  I think that strong returns in our public equity books. I returned to the fact that, as you can tell from the marketplace, some of the privates are struggling. We're pleased that all of our privates were positive. Everything was positive, albeit not necessarily super, super positive, but on the right side of the ledger. And public or public markets portfolios continued to do pretty well last year, with a 22% return in public equity, which really carried the day for us in a bunch of ways. And our bond books kind of, again, crawling out a couple of percentage points as well help to the overall return. So fully funded, decent year are the key things. 

Reena added some perspective on the member side, stating HOOPP welcomed its 500,000th member, the Waterloo Regional Health Network expanded HOOPP eligibility and The Hospital for Sick
Children (SickKids) joined HOOPP at the end of last year. 

I noted HOOPP's public equity performance was really strong last year -- 22% -- trouncing most of its peers (but below the S&P/TSX Composite Index’s 32% gain). I asked Michael to explain the outperformance there.

He replied:

We really globally diversified last year. We increased our diversification, moving a little bit away from MSCI ACWI which we never really follow. We diversified a little bit more, and we added a little bit in as well, so that that also helped. From peak to trough to peak, there was quite a big rip in degrees when you account for April. So I would say better global diversification and adding into the sell-off, which was an interesting experience for us because our incoming CEO, Ainsley, had only been on the job literally days and was right there with us, supporting us as we were looking to take advantage of that opportunity. So she jumped into the frame and really contributed to helping us capitalize on that opportunity

It always helps when the new CEO supports the investment team during turbulent times.

As Michael explained, HOOPP didn't shift out of US equities into all Canadian equities when Liberation Day hit; they just diversified more globally.  "We had more countries, so Australia and Canada, we added Japan, we added Europe, and we took the US down."

I then noted HOOPP has a massive fixed income portfolio and asked Michael to explain their approach there and why it's so important.

He replied:

We still have a liability-aware investment strategy. We want to own fixed income for risk-off environments and for when the discount rate is brought low by lower interest rates, if that regime was ever to show up. But at the same time, we want to protect ourselves against an inflationary world. And that's why what makes HOOPP a little bit unique is the quantum of real return bonds. We are still of the size that we can maintain a very high proportion of our bond portfolio in real return bonds and that's what we continue to do here. We grew our proportion (in real return bonds) a little bit up to 20% which is in the annual report. But most of that would have been buying TIPS (US Treasury Inflation Protection Securities) because we weren't able to buy RRBs in Canada. As you know, those options are no longer prevalent. We continue to hope that they will return at some point, but absent having access to those in size, we did add some TIPS to the portfolio. And that's really to keep that real / nominal mix appropriately balanced, so that you've got a hedge that helps you if something blows up, but not so much nominal that you get into trouble if inflation becomes a concern. 

I asked Michael and Reena to give me some flavour on private markets and Reena responded: 

As you noted, private markets were positive. We delivered a billion dollars of income across those private market strategies. And we're also probably unique in that we have less allocation to private markets, so only 35% in private markets and the rest in capital markets (public markets). From that perspective, the private equity story is quite similar other plans; we're seeing they had similar issues from a valuation perspective. There's less in the market, so we're making impact. From that perspective, real estate, similar story, although I think we see some improvement across certain sectors starting to pick up, like Office, but we're still, it's still struggling, or at least it was to the end of 2025. I think our infrastructure was a bit different. We did have one specific asset that returned down, but overall that portfolio is quite resilient

She told me the asset that got hit in Infrastructure was a renewable energy asset in the US and given policy changes there, that asset was marked down significantly.

I told Michael that I read all about the total portfolio approach in the annual report and asked him to give me more context:

You've been following this evolution in the pension industry for years. I'm a big believer in this. I've never been big on SAA  (strategic asset allocation). I'm not sure exactly what magic weights work through the full economic cycle. So we're really embracing the idea of having a coordinated portfolio, where, rather than saying, XYZ private asset, here's a bucket, go fill it, working with them, and say, what are the characteristics of the assets that we really need at the total portfolio level and then being adaptable when when something goes up in the net or, or something gets overtly expensive and adjusting our weight. 

We're big fans of this total portfolio approach. It's an integrated and adaptable strategy, rather than sort of being rigid around some sort of SAA approach. It requires the complete and full support of our board and strong governance. And I would say that's very much in place, and I feel very good about it.

 He added:

We're just sort of formalizing that now under this nomenclature, but in my mind, it's nothing new. It's formalized in something new but I would say it's really been a part of what's made us successful over the long and medium term. And we're just going to continue on with that.

I agreed that in order for the total portfolio approach to work well, you need the right governance and the right compensation system that aligns incentives with total portfolio return objectives.

Reena jumped in:

We think that's correct. When I started on the 31st of August last year, and coming in, it is a very different approach because TPA was not being fully implemented; it's very different. I think we do look at things at a total fund level and look at opportunities as they come.

Michael added:

It's safe to say that we are increasingly focused on total fund return from a compensation perspective as well. We want to align with our members, we want to align with our sponsors. And so just to your point, you need all of these elements pulling together, and this has been a big lift. And we think we're really well positioned to take advantage of the opportunities that the markets are going to present to us over the next several years.

On the 2030 strategy, Reena gave me more flavour on what Annesley is looking for:

She is really pulling on growing the three pillars that have been highlighted in the strategy. So our members, our portfolio and returns, and then the community itself. So it's really who's also unique in that we're growing plan and really leaning into that. I think that that's one thing that we've talked a lot about, and also just focusing back on what are we really delivering for the fund? It comes down to, we need to deliver 4.5% to 6.5%  real returns to be able to pay pensions. So that was really something that I think shifted in terms of our focus. Obviously, we do look at benchmarks and how we compare on a relative basis, but that focus on looking at real returns is something that we're working through, making sure that we stay fully funded.

I noted Chantale Pelletier was appointed as the new Head of Global Infrastructure at the beginning of the year and said it's too soon for a new strategy there but wondedred if they're discussing anything new in infrastructure.

Michael responded:

She was a part of the delegation that went to Australia very recently. You may have seen with the Australian Prime Minister. She represented us well, as we signed along with the peer plans that cooperation agreement. It was great to have her be a part of that. I would say, Chantale is coming in and and we're pretty much assessing all of our individual strategies. We don't think big changes are coming, but we only started infrastructure in 2019, so we still have dry powder in that area.

In particular, regulated Canadian assets, where they're made available, are something we're ready, willing, and able to look at. We want to make sure that we're ready and focused on that. 

I do believe, after a period of time when there weren't a lot of those (infrastructure) assets in Canada to really consider that we're going to see more of them over the next year or two. And HOOPP is going to look at all of those, as well as all the other peer plans. 

I think we all see the value of those made in Canada investment opportunities where you don't take foreign exchange risk, where you understand the political climate, where you understand the legal framework, particularly regulated assets,  where you might need some inflation protection. These kinds of assets look particularly compelling to HOOPP because we endeavor to pay COLA (cost of living adjustment). So we're always very careful and focused on the advent of an inflation regime, and making sure we're protecting ourselves against that. 

I told him I hope he's right and he added:

I'm pretty confident. I really do sense things will have to move at a thoughtful and careful pace. I mean, you want to make sure you do the right not necessarily do them quick. But I do get the sense that things are moving forward behind this means we're seeing more and more things starting to become available. And it's not just the federal level, the provincial level, and even at the municipal level as well. We think there's going to be various opportunities to participate with our policymakers, and we remain optimistic. So from an infrastructure perspective, to answer your question, I would say we're turning our eye a little bit more domestically, and we're keeping some powder dry, waiting for those opportunities to come in due time.

On F/X risk, I asked if they hedge it completely and Micahel told me not completely but they do hedge a lot of it. He and Reena told me the depreciation of the US dollar had a negligible effect on the plan's overall results last year.

I asked Michael if he looks at where HOOPP is now, given where markets are, their 
domestic exposure, the fact that infrastructure is really just ramping up, would he say they're in a really good position given the unceertain macro and geopolitical environment? 

He replied: 

I actually feel very good about our portfolio right now. We have an incredibly balanced portfolio. I think a good mix, again, between real and nominal bonds.

I think we are very well balanced, which is the secret to navigating these rough times. If you have a balanced portfolio and you're not over the tips of your skis, then when those are anchored, incredibly liquid and focused on liquidity, then you're able to take advantage of the opportunities as they present themselves. 

And so, when I'm looking at the next several years, I think that this portfolio is solid and can hit on required rates of returns. And I think, looking at a year, two years, three years, there may be opportunities that present themselves where you can really lean into something, whether it's domestic infrastructure, or whether private equity becomes more compelling again, or whether it's equities, something above the equities, or bonds back up, or real yields move up higher. 

I mean, you can buy some more of those, because even though these things will always present themselves, but you've got to enter into those opportunities with a balanced portfolio. And that's really where I think we are right now. 

On private credit, I noted JPMorgan restricted this activity today after markdowns, but it all depends on underwriting. I asked whether this is a big portfolio at HOOPP and how they approach it. 

Reena said it was a small portfolio and Michael responded to my question: 

Well, I think you hit the nail on the head; it is all about underwriting. The thing about credit that people have to understand is that it's not broad data. I think that's the problem. People want to think of private credit in terms of good or bad, and the reality is, there are parameters involved. 

You have to be very good at underwriting. HOOPP has been very involved in the credit space for a long period of time. I would say it's one of our core competencies in credit, not just HOOPP for the record, I would say other Maple 8 funds as well. 

We feel really comfortable with our credit underwriting ability and the partners that we've chosen to underwrite credit with. I would say we've been growing our private credit space, but it's been a little bit more cautious over the last few years, as we've been just a little bit careful in terms of growing them. 

It's something given the right risk-reward relationships, we're still ready to participate in. But, you hit the nail on the head. The word is underwriting. You have to underwrite very effectively, choosing the right partners, choosing the right transactions. And we didn't have a great year last year, but over the last several years, we have performed really well. 

It's also the kind of product that suits a pension plan well, trying to get to that 4.5% and 6.5% real that we talked about,. Typically, we can get those targets in a private credit context. So it suits pension plans well, but again, it's just a matter of Reena's point earlier, you just want to make sure you size it right. 

On absolute return strategies, both internal and external, Micahel told me last year was a "great year".

Finally, Reena told me drive for new members is going well and HOOPP is welcoming Ontario doctors to its pension plan, which is excellent news. 

Alright, it's late, I'm just glad the weather has killed my power yet as we have a major ice storm in Montreal.

I once again thank Michael and Reena for taking the time to talk to me to share all these insights. 

Below, Annesley Wallace, President and Chief Executive Officer, reflects on HOOPP’s 2025 results and a milestone year for the Plan. 

HOOPP surpassed $130 billion in net assets, remained fully funded, expanded access to eligible physicians and their employees and welcomed The Hospital for Sick Children, meaning every hospital in Ontario now offers a HOOPP pension. We also welcomed our 500,000th member.

Watch to learn how they are continuing to invest wisely and deliver on our pension promise to Ontario’s healthcare community.

A Discussion With OTPP's CEO and CIOs on Their 2025 Results

James Bradshaw of the Globe and Mail reports Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan earns 6.7% return, marks down private equity and real estate assets:

Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan earned a 6.7-per-cent return in 2025 but missed its internal benchmark for performance by a wide margin as it marked down struggling private equity and real estate assets.

The plan’s investment gains were bolstered by its publicly traded stock portfolio, which increased in value by 15 per cent, as well as its holdings in gold. Its smaller venture growth arm was up 30 per cent on rising valuations at companies such as SpaceX and Databricks.

But Teachers’ private equity portfolio lost 5.3 per cent, against an 18-per-cent benchmark that is weighted toward public stocks. And its real estate portfolio lost 3.1 per cent.

Overall, Teachers fell short of its 11.7-per-cent benchmark by 5 percentage points - a difference of $12-billion of potential investment income.

Chief executive officer Jo Taylor attributed the plan’s poor results in private equity and real estate in part to “broad sector headwinds,” in a statement.

“We responded with disciplined year-end valuation adjustments to reflect current market conditions, which weighed on performance,” he said.

Teachers also lost $1.2-billion on foreign currency moves, in particular the depreciation of the U.S. dollar against the Canadian dollar, but said it softened the impact by managing its currency exposure during the year.

Over 10 years, Teachers has had an average annual return of 6.8 per cent. Its assets increased to $279.4-billion, from $266.3-billion a year earlier.

The plan is 111 per cent funded, with a $31.2-billion preliminary funding surplus as of the start of 2026, meaning it has more money on hand than it expects to pay out in pensions to members.

“Despite the uncertain environment, our investment business delivered strong dollars earned and was able to successfully realize some key assets while proactively working to address challenging areas of the portfolio,” Mr. Taylor said.

Teachers manages pensions for about 346,000 members in Ontario, including working and retired teachers. 

Layan Odeh of Bloomberg also reports Ontario Teachers' posts first private equity loss since 2099:

Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan is overhauling its approach to investing in private equity after the $200 billion asset manager booked its first loss on that portfolio in 16 years.

After the value of its private equity holdings dropped by about C$10 billion ($7.4 billion) in 2025, the Canadian firm said it will shift its focus in that business to just three sectors: financial services, technology and services. The overall fund still generated a 6.7% return last year, thanks to the rising value of stocks, gold and its investment in Elon Musk’s SpaceX.

“We saw adjustments in software with the AI uncertainty, and we saw adjustments in health care that just had to do with likely an overbuy in the market through a given period that just created more vintage risk,” Gillian Brown, chief investment officer for public and private investments, said in an interview. “I think outside of that, you’re really talking about more idiosyncratic.”

The change means the pension plan no longer has specific teams focusing on health-care investments and the sustainable energy transition within that unit, according to its website. 

“We felt before we were too broad,” Chief Executive Officer Jo Taylor said in the interview. “I wouldn’t honestly say the three that we have today are going to be the only ones we have forever — this is just a for-now type question.” 

The value of Ontario Teachers’ private equity holdings totaled C$50.8 billion at year-end. 

Lowering Valuations

While the executives declined to identify companies that were marked down, Taylor said the pension plan lowered valuations for some investments made in the wake of the pandemic. 

Assets in the fund’s private equity portfolio include dental support firm Abano Healthcare, eye-care services provider Nvision and PhyMed Healthcare Group. Ontario Teachers’ acquired a majority stake in software maker Miratech in 2021 in a deal that valued the firm at more than $1.5 billion. In December, Miratech secured a $2 billion loan from private credit firms led by Blackstone Inc. to refinance a bank loan package.  

The pension plan will continue using external fund managers within private equity, with Jeff Markusson leading the effort as senior managing director of global funds. Third-party funds account for 28% of the private equity portfolio, with direct investments making up most of the rest. 

The private equity team has undergone other changes over the past year, including the appointment of Dale Burgess as head of equities and the addition of a department focused on value creation. Harj Shoan, senior managing director for sustainable energy transition and head of global funds, left the firm, and at least five other senior managers from that unit have departed over the past several months. 

Canada’s largest pension plans are re-evaluating their private equity play books amid rising macroeconomic uncertainty and a difficult climate for deal exits. Ontario Municipal Employees Retirement System, which posted a 2.5% loss for its private equity investments last year, revamped that unit over the past two years, including hiring a new global head, halting direct buyouts in Europe and cutting a team focused on the asset class in Asia. 

“We want to be actively investing in private equity,” Taylor said. “But we have to be self-aware and say, ‘What are we good at and where do we want to spend more of our time and capital going forward?’”

Ontario Teachers’ venture growth portfolio surged 30%, largely because of its stakes in SpaceX and software firm Databricks.

The fund’s overall return, which fell short of the benchmark by 5 percentage points, pushed the Canadian fund’s net assets to C$279.4 billion as of December. 

Ontario Teachers’ real estate group, which is long on Canadian shopping malls, had another tough year, losing 3.1% — partly because of the bankruptcy of department store chain Hudson’s Bay Co.

The fund posted a C$1.2 billion loss from foreign-currency exposure, mostly because of a slump in the US dollar. 

Ontario Teachers’ exposure to the US increased to 38% last year from 33% in 2024, while Canada comprised 31% of investments, down from 36%. 

The pension plan is looking at two sectors in the US: power and transition related activities as well as technology. The fund invested in artificial intelligence firm Anthropic last year. 

Earlier today, Ontario Teachers’ announced positive 2025 results: 

  • Achieved a one-year total-fund net return of 6.7%.
  • Strong returns across venture growth, public equity, gold and credit.
  • Underperformed the 2025 benchmark return of 11.7% by 5.0%, resulting in negative value add of $12.0 billion.
  • Delivered a ten-year annualized total-fund net return of 6.8% and return since inception of 9.2%.
  • Fully funded for the 13th straight year with a strong preliminary funding surplus of $31.2 billion.

TORONTO - Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan Board (Ontario Teachers’) today announced a one-year total-fund net return of 6.7% for the year ended December 31, 20251, compared to a 9.4% return in 2024. Net assets grew to $279.4 billion, up from $266.3 billion in 2024. Investment income of $18.5 billion and member and employer contributions of $4.1 billion for the year were partially offset by benefits paid of $8.5 billion and administrative expenses of $1.0 billion.

The plan is fully funded as at January 1, 2026, with a $31.2 billion preliminary funding surplus, compared to a funding surplus of $29.1 billion last year. This equates to a funding ratio of 111%, up from 110% in the prior year. This marks the plan’s 13th consecutive year being fully funded (meaning plan assets exceed future pension liabilities), underscoring the plan’s long-term financial health and stability.

"Our 2025 results reflect the resilience of our diversified portfolio and the disciplined approach we take to managing the plan on behalf of our members. We remain fully funded and delivered a one‑year net return of 6.7%, supported by strong performance from gold and our venture growth and public equities asset classes. Our private equity and real estate teams had a more challenging year given broad sector headwinds. We responded with disciplined year-end valuation adjustments to reflect current market conditions, which weighed on performance,” said Jo Taylor, President & Chief Executive Officer. “Despite the uncertain environment, our investment business delivered strong dollars earned and was able to successfully realize some key assets while proactively working to address challenging areas of the portfolio. Moving forward, our focus is on maintaining our sound funding position by delivering strong risk‑adjusted returns and continuing to deliver excellent service to our members.”

While delivering strong investment income, the Plan underperformed relative to the benchmark return of 11.7% by 5.0%, or $12.0 billion in negative value add2. The benchmark underperformance was driven by several factors including continued robust performance in our public market-linked benchmarks, as well as constrained performance of certain assets particularly the private equity, infrastructure and real estate asset classes.

1 All figures are as at December 31, 2025, and denominated in Canadian dollars unless noted.

2 Value-add is the amount of return in excess of (below) benchmarks after deducting management fees, transaction costs and administrative costs allocated to the active programs (includes annual incentives but does not include long-term incentives).

Impact of currency on returns

In 2025, the fund experienced a foreign currency loss of $1.2 billion as assets denominated in foreign currencies depreciated in value when converted back into Canadian dollars. This was primarily driven by the depreciation of the U.S. dollar compared to the Canadian dollar. The fund’s net exposure to the U.S. dollar is significantly larger than any other foreign currency. The negative impact was significantly reduced thanks to the fund’s proactive management of our exposure to currency markets during the year.

Investment performance

Given the plan’s liabilities stretch decades into the future, results over longer periods are particularly important. Ontario Teachers’ has delivered an annualized total-fund net return of 9.2% since inception in 1990, and five- and 10-year annualized total-fund net returns of 6.6% and 6.8%, respectively.

Time Period One-yearFive-year 10-yearSince InceptionTotal-fund net return6.7%6.6%6.8%9.2%

 

Portfolio Performance by Asset Class (all figures as at December 31)

Fund returns (%)3ActualBenchmarkActualBenchmark 2025202520242024Equity    Public equity15.013.923.225.8Private equity(5.3)18.011.723.7Venture growth30.218.525.829.2 6.116.716.724.8     Fixed income2.62.64.84.8     Inflation sensitive    Commodities27.027.025.225.2Natural resources1.80.013.315.0Inflation hedge(4.7)(4.7)9.89.8 13.613.218.619.1Real assets    Real estate(3.1)2.2(0.7)5.0Infrastructure1.87.89.18.5 (0.4)5.34.97.0     Credit5.84.517.216.8Total-fund net return6.711.79.412.9

 

3 The total-fund net return is calculated after deducting transaction costs, management fees and investment administrative costs. Asset-class returns are calculated before deducting investment administrative costs.

The table below summarizes Ontario Teachers' portfolio mix by asset class for the current and previous year.

Portfolio Performance by Asset Class (all figures as at December 31)

Asset Class$ billions%$ billions% 2025202520242024Equity    Public equity50.018%37.414%Private equity50.819%60.423%Venture growth15.36%10.44% 116.143%108.241%     Fixed income61.823%78.030%     Inflation sensitive    Commodities32.112%28.911%Natural resources12.14%12.55%Inflation hedge11.9 4%12.65% 56.120%54.021%Real assets    Real estate27.910%29.411%Infrastructure34.513%43.217% 62.423%72.628%     Credit38.314%37.214%Absolute return strategies25.29%24.09%Funding and other4(87.3)(32%)(113.1)(43%)Net investments5272.6100%260.9100%

 

4 Includes funding for investments (term debt, bond repurchase agreements, implied funding from derivatives, unsecured funding and liquidity reserves) and overlay strategies that manage the foreign exchange risk for the total fund.

5 Comprises investments less investment-related liabilities. Total net assets of $279.4 billion at December 31, 2025 (2024 - $266.3 billion) include net investments and other net assets and liabilities of $6.8 billion (2024 - $5.4 billion)

Investment highlights

Ontario Teachers’ manages approximately 75% of its assets internally, with a focus on deploying capital into a mix of active and passive strategies around the world.

Transaction highlights in 2025 include:

  • Participated in the Series F funding round of Anthropic, the AI safety and research company behind Claude.
  • Invested in Darwinbox, a leading cloud-based human resources technology provider in Asia, as part of their latest funding round.
  • Acquired Donte Group, a leading dental care platform in Europe, to support growth and innovation in healthcare services.
  • Acquired a prime logistics real estate portfolio in Sweden and Denmark alongside partner Fokus Nordic.
  • Agreed to acquire our first residential real estate asset in Sweden through a new partnership with Gordion.
  • Invested in Grafana Labs, a global leader in open-source observability and monitoring solutions, as part of a funding round to accelerate global expansion.
  • Completed our fourth investment into National Highways Infrastructure Trust (NHIT), the Government of India’s nodal agency for national highway development.
  • Participated in Quantexa’s Series F investment round, supporting the company’s growth in decision intelligence solutions.
  • Led StackAdapt’s latest funding round, supporting the Canada-based company’s growth as a leading programmatic advertising platform.

Realizations from 2025 include:

  • Completed the sale of our stakes in Copenhagen, Brussels, Birmingham, Bristol, and London City Airports.
  • Reached an agreement to sell Amica Senior Lifestyles, a leading provider of premium senior living residences in Canada.
  • Partnered with Ethos Capital, BCI and White Mountains alongside BroadStreet to drive the next chapter of growth.
  • Completed the sale of our stake in Diot-Siaci to Ardian, marking an exit from a leading European insurance brokerage group.
  • Reached an agreement to sell our remaining stake in future free cash flow from New Gold’s New Afton Mine.
  • Completed the sale of Sahyadri Hospitals, a leading healthcare network in India.
  • Completed the sale of our majority stake in Sydney Desalination Plant to Utilities Trust of Australia, supporting sustainable water infrastructure in Australia.  

Corporate news

  • Chris Goodsir and Bill Butt were appointed to Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan’s board by the Ontario Teachers’ Federation, with terms commencing January 1, 2026, replacing Gene Lewis and Patti Croft respectively.
  • Terry Hickey was appointed as Chief Technology Officer to oversee Ontario Teachers’ enterprise technology activities globally.
  • Christopher Metrakos, Dale Burgess and Jenny Hammarlund were appointed Executive Managing Directors for Infrastructure & Natural Resources, Equities, and Real Estate respectively, each responsible for guiding their teams’ global strategy, portfolios and asset management activities.
  • Constructively engaged with the federal government to discuss “nation building” projects and the Ontario government to consider large investments meant to bolster economic development. Discussions on investments from Ontario Teachers’ in these projects are ongoing. 
  • Achieved a 50% reduction of portfolio carbon emissions intensity in 2025 compared to our 2019 baseline, exceeding our 2025 emissions intensity target.
  • Subsequent to year-end, published the 2026-2030 Climate Strategy, which introduced a 2030 target of $70 billion in Climate Transition Aligned (“CTA”) assets, encompassing private market investments in companies that are decarbonizing their operations and those enabling the global energy transition. Over the next five years, our goal is to double our CTA assets from their approximate value of $35 billion6.

Note to Editors: To read our annual report, please click here.

6 As at June 30, 2025, Ontario Teachers' had an estimated $35 billion in the Paris Aligned Reduction Target and Green Assets programs, which is being used as a proxy for our CTA assets.

About Ontario Teachers’

Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan Board (Ontario Teachers') is a global investor with net assets of $279.4 billion as at December 31, 2025. Ontario Teachers’ is a fully funded defined benefit pension plan, and it invests in a broad array of asset classes to deliver retirement security for 346,000 working members and pensioners. For more information, visit otpp.com and follow us on LinkedIn

Take the time to read OTPP's 2025 annual report here

The annual report is comprehensive, well written, and goes over a lot of material.

Below, you will find the table of contents:


 I recommend you read Chair Steve McGirr's message on page 8 where I note the following:

I am pleased to report that the Plan remains fully funded for the 13th consecutive year, delivering a positive investment return in a year marked by continued uncertainty and market volatility. This positive outcome reinforces the soundness of a model built to withstand the types of external pressures that defined 2025.

The Plan’s resilience has been built over time. Since its inception in 1990, the Plan has generated a cumulative investment return of 9.2%, reflecting consistent performance across a range of economic and market conditions. Investment returns now account for approximately 80% of the Plan’s total assets, with contributions from members, the Ontario government and designated employers making up the remaining 20%. This long-term balance, together with a strong surplus, should provide members and sponsors with confidence in the Plan’s ability to pay pensions now and into the future.

Then read CEO Jo Taylor's message on page 10 where I note the following:

In 2025 we earned a total-fund net return of 6.7%, just shy of our 7% annual target. In the year, we generated net investment income of $18.5 billion and grew our net assets to $279.4 billion. With those returns, we remain fully funded for a 13th straight year with a preliminary funding surplus of $31.2 billion.

That performance was driven by double-digit returns from our allocation to gold, with strong returns from our venture growth and public equity portfolios. At the same time, we faced continued headwinds in our private equity and real estate portfolios. Overall, this was a good outcome in a complex and unpredictable investment environment.

That said, our net return trailed our benchmark. Our active programs are designed to consistently deliver excess returns, but this was not the case in 2025. This will be a key focus for improvement in 2026. Other key priorities will be to deploy capital where we have a competitive advantage and to raise our game on value creation to improve the operational performance of the businesses in which we are invested. 

He also notes this on investment highlights:

While our investment activity in private markets was reduced in 2025, we were able to add some exciting new companies to the portfolio. Additions included Anthropic, the company behind the AI-model Claude, and Donte Group, a leading dental care platform in Spain. In our home market, we led StackAdapt’s latest funding round, supporting their growth as a leading programmatic advertising platform.

More significantly, we were also able to sell several investments during the year freeing up capital for new opportunities. One highlight was the sale of our portfolio of five European airports, which returned $8 billion of capital and concluded more than 20 successful years of ownership in that sector. See pages 66–67 for more details on sale of this portfolio.

Another key priority for us is to deliver outstanding service to our members at the right cost. Member satisfaction remains very high, and we received a perfect score from 46% of our members.  

I will also refer you to the Q&A with chief investment officers Gillian Brown and Stephen McLennan on pages 28-29. I note this passage:

Q: 2025 brought headwinds in private markets. Given their importance to the Plan, what shifts, if any, are you making to support performance of the portfolio?
Gillian: Many private asset classes are facing industry-wide sectoral headwinds, and in some cases, asset-specific challenges, that require active hands-on work to address. If you take private equity, for instance, investors across the spectrum, including ourselves, are dealing with a less liquid market for both acquisitions and exits, higher interest rates, and greater competition for the best deals.

As active investors and owners, we are working closely with our companies to build and protect value. Examples of how we are doing that include deepening our value creation capabilities to improve our company’s operational performance, prioritizing investment in areas where we have an edge, and using technology and data more effectively to drive insights and productivity. Read more about how we are increasing value creation
efforts across the portfolio on pages 56–57.

We are also excited to have appointed new leaders in a number of asset classes including Equities (Dale Burgess), Infrastructure & Natural Resources (Christopher Metrakos) and Real Estate (Jenny Hammarlund). All three have a successful track record at Ontario Teachers’, substantial experience investing in private markets and are well placed to oversee successful execution of our investment plan.  

 Now, before I get into my discussion with Jo, Gillian, and Stephen, some high-level comments.

First, OTPP's detailed asset mix:

The key thing here is the fund has 52% of its assets in private markets (PE + venture + natural resources + real estate + infrastructure), and I'm not including private credit embedded in the Credit portfolio.  

Next, let's look at total fund investment performance and by asset class:

 The overall performance was 6.7%, just under the 7% it requires, and 5% less than the benchmark return of 11.7%.

The biggest underperformance came in Private Equity which declined 5.3%, significantly underperforming its benchmark that gained 18%.

Real Estate also declined by 3.1%, underperforming its benchmark which gained 2.2%, and Infrastructure gained 1.8% but underperformed its benchmark of 7.8%.  

When three of the biggest private market asset classes underperform their benchmark by a wide margin and 52% of your assets are there, it detracts from overall performance, especially when Private Equity loses 5% in an odd year since that is the most important private market asset class at Teachers'.

Still, despite the paltry performance in private markets, Teachers' did manage to post a gain of 6.7% last year because of gains in public equities, commodities and venture growth which had an exceptional year.

I believe absolute return strategies also kicked in to help boost overall performance but need to double-check this.

That speaks volumes about the benefits of a diversified portfolio. 

As far as currency losses, I note this from the annual report (page 53): 

In 2025, the fund experienced a foreign currency loss of $1.2 billion, or 0.45% net loss, as assets denominated in foreign currencies depreciated in value when converted back into Canadian dollars.This impact was significantly reduced as a result of our proactive management of our exposure tocurrency markets during the year. 

This loss was primarily driven by the depreciation of the U.S. dollar compared to the Canadian dollar (making our U.S. dollar denominated assets less valuable when converted back into our home currency). The fund’s net exposure to the U.S. dollar is significantly larger than any other foreign currency. 

Not as bad as peers as Teachers' started reducing US Treasuries early in 2025.

Discussion with Jo Taylor, Gillian Brown and Stephen McLennan

Earlier today, I had a Teams meeting with Jo Taylor, Gillian Brown, and Stephen McLennan to go over their 2025 results. 

I want to thank them for taking the time to speak with me and also thank Dan Madge for setting up the virtual meeting. 

Jo began by giving me an overview of the results:

We would look back at 2025 and say this. We're still generating the returns we need to keep the plan well funded. You know, 111% funded. It's a balanced portfolio that's well constituted and resilient to the shocks and challenges the world is serving up, which is very relevant today.

When we look back at the performance, you could see it was a bit of a mixed bag. We had headwinds and challenges in old and new areas. So, old areas, a bit more in real estate and in private equity, but we had pleasant surprises in venture growth and our inflation-sensitive commodities area, which actually came up with the returns we did, which has been pretty close to what we've been trying to generate on a regular basis. 

I think there are other things to say, which I think have allowed us to be quite discerning and prudent as we think about the portfolio very actively, actually, less within the investing side of the market, but more in the divesting side of the market. We sold a number of companies at good prices, our portfolio being probably the ones that are a standalone group, and that allows us to be pretty connected with how buyers see our assets. And actually, what are their issues, what we need to be doing to make our portfolio market-ready, and that's where we have the choice between those companies for the future, or seeing that it's probably the time for us to look for an exit, if we can get the right

And the other thing I would say is we've really tried to build our capability alongside the asset teams, with specialist teams that can help on value creation, value protection and making our portfolio companies exit-ready. So we have a Portfolio Solutions Group which we're building to be able to do that alongside our investment teams, and most importantly, making sure that they get in touch with our thinking as we invest in those businesses, as well as once we're already engaged.

And then that's just to say, the world remains uncertain, and probably where that affects us is thinking about what might be the go-forward, as well as just reacting to things.

And secondly, with the uncertainty that's around -- which you could go back to 2025 around tariffs and Liberation Day and all those questions --  try and see what the opportunity is for segments of the market, geographies and particular companies, in terms of their growth aspects. And that's been, I would say in my own experience, more difficult than perhaps it has been historically, to be accurate, because there's a fair bit of uncertainty around which I think takes more time and more skill to figure out. 

I then separated it out into two areas, private markets being extremely important at Ontario Teachers', were weaker, particularly in private equity. I remember Gillian talking to me about structural changes in private equity. I asked her flat out if Ontario Teachers' took a lot more writedowns last year in private equity to flush it out. Is that a fair assessment?

Gillian replied:

Maybe it's a semantic question, but a couple of things there. One is that we obviously go through the full valuation process every year, which is both internal and with external auditors, and we get opinions on valuations of assets, etc. And so there's no process this year that would be any different from our normal course. I think it points to a couple of things. One, to Jo's point earlier around as you go to market, and as we see assets transacting, you get a better sense of what the market is aimed for or not. And there can be some look-through to other assets you hold. How is the market looking at earnings quality, or how is the market looking at growth potential? How is the market considering platform valuations, whatever that may be. And so we took a good, strong look at our portfolio to see what the impacts could be there. I think those were sort of the factors, more than some view.

I noted that I also saw there was a change in the approach in private equity, focusing on three sectors: financial services, technology and services. I asked Gillian if it's fair to say they'll be doing a lot more fund investing and co-investing going forward.

She responded:

I wouldn't say that that's a goal. It could happen if that's where we see the best opportunities. But I think we're still committed as a direct investor in private equity. We still think that we can invest where we have a competitive advantage and generate better returns. So that's still an area of focus. I think we're saying, those are the sectors where we see our competitive advantage. There could be other sectors that we want to invest in that we don't see that competitive advantage. And it would therefore behoove us to partner with, you know, people we think are smart in those areas, and whether that generates co-investment or not, I think we would obviously like to target co-investment as a fee management exercise. But I think it's going to be a question of what the opportunities we face are versus a targeted view around how much funds or directs we want to do. 

I also noted that the Portfolio Solutions Group is integral in this process. I asked if it's fair to say that this group really is the one that's going to be driving the value creation going forward in private markets, not just private equity, but all private markets?

Jo responded: 

It does vary. I think the lead focus will be writing because of the nature of those assets. I'd also say that it's not a hand over the asset to the Portfolio Solutions Group, they work with the deal teams who are actually accountable for the returns on the choices they put to the Investment Committee.

The point that's important is trying to bring more in-house skills to bear around those assets. So technology expertise, particularly around AI, would be one example. Human resource expertise, around assessing management teams and finding solutions when things aren't working quite the way we hope, or people depart. So there are a few areas, specific areas, where we're trying to write a shot bringing those skills to bear on, I think, it'd be honest. It won't be every asset in the portfolio, but the ones where it's most opportunity to do it now, which is on a timing basis or a value size basis. The job here is to give the asset every opportunity to perform correctly. And if we get that right, we'll hang on to it and if it's not performing to our expectations, on return target, then we will have a different conversation. 

I noted in infrastructure, Jo made a good point about selling the airports at the right price. The return on infrastructure, however, was not as high as I expected it to be (1.8% whereas it's typically 7-8% or higher). I asked if there was any specific reason why it wasn't as high this year. 

Gillian responded:

It's more of a question there of sort of some assets that underperformed, so really more of an idiosyncratic story around a handful of assets rather than a larger statement on the infrastructure overall. 

I asked if they invested in Thames Water and Jo confirmed they were not.

In real estate, I noted there's a new head there, Jenny Hammarlund who's doing a great job diversifying the portfolio internationally. I asked what's going on in real estate and why it underperformed last year.

Stephen responded:

Happy to give some comments on that. You're right, Jenny has been with the firm for several years, and more recently, was named the head of real estate. She's thus far done a fantastic job. 

The story with real estate is really what's happening in Canada is one piece, and then what's happening internationally. This sector in Canada specifically has a lot of challenges over the last four or five years, think COVID, think a number of failures of major kind of retailers and so on. 

I think that's been a very big challenge. You've also had the specter of kind of just rising cost of capital, higher interest rates, and how that flows through, kind of cost accounting and valuation pieces. 

On the Canadian side, the impact of Hudson Bay was a big driver of performance in 2025. We're seeing some green shoots now in terms of return to the office. Streets are quite busy. That has an impact both on the office side, but it also drives traffic into our malls, which we tend to bring our locations. And so there are some signs of, I suppose, on the real estate piece. 

The other part of the equation is what's been going on internationally and and frankly, that's part of the efforts to diversify that portfolio away from Canada to kind of get a different flavour of exposure, both geographically and by sector, as you know, prior to or one of the one of the challenges with our portfolio of Canada is that it is very concentrated to the sectors that have been impacted the most over the last couple of years. And so there has been a conscious effort to try to source assets and sectors that are different than that. And those were actually quite positive in 2025 if you think about some of the exposures in Northern Europe, as well as some of the exposures in our US-related to our data center.

They shared with me that their real estate portfolio is now 56% Canada, down significantly from prior to Covid when it was 85% Canadian (all managed by Cadillac Fairview).

I moved on to private credit which continues to do well. I asked if they can talk a little bit about the credit portfolio, which is a mixed bag of emerging market debt, high yield and private credit. 

Gillian responded:

In terms of private credit, I think the portfolio is still fairly small compared to some others who would have either bought platforms or partnered with GPS to build a portfolio more quickly than we would have. We chose to go in and build our own private credit business so that we could handle that sort of individual name underwriting which in our view, is proving to be very valuable in the current market. So that portfolio, I would expect to be somewhat challenged with software exposure, like every private credit portfolio is, but not to be challenged around some of this kind of rehypothecation issue around collateral for votes. 

On Emerging Market credit and private credit, she added this:

EM private credit is one that we don't really do. I'm trying to think what we have in private credit, it would be negligible. EM credit is something that we do more in the liquid space. I don't think it's impacted by this at all. 

I think again, private credit, for us, we are doing those underwrites pretty carefully. I'd say having the team, and we've talked about it before, but having credit as a team across public, private, EM/ DM, etc, it means that that team can shift to where the opportunities are, versus having sort of target allocations. 

And so that gives us more flexibility.That just means that when spreads tighten and they're there, you don't feel like you're being paid sufficiently for the risk and private credit. It's easy to allocate more into public markets and the allocation at the top of the house. So I'd say we have a, probably a pretty flexible approach compared to most of our peers.

I moved on to this year, noting volatility is insanely high. I asked Stephen about asset allocation and he responded:

Yeah, sure. No, just a comment on the volatility piece, which was the January, February story. I see you alluded to what feels like a year of volatility in three or four weeks, want to be careful to say, because I don't think this time is volatility comes and goes, and so you need to be aware of that again, as you're aware with this premise of building a portfolio that's resilient to a prepared in advance for these kind of shots, not knowing what those shots are going to be.
That's certainly one of the underlying principles that we use, and we have a reasonably large allocation to inflation-sensitive asset classes not to predict, not to predict these types but to protect their portfolio in the event that these things occur.

And certainly that's been both in 2025 but also in 2026 that really served as well in terms of really providing some offsets to some of the negative moves we've seen in equities and interest income, which, by the way, for the magnitude of the events, have been relatively stable. I think the volatility that you're referring to has been surprisingly buying markets, not as much in kind of the more traditional asset space, income, the two main ones, and that's being the other way, 

I noted that Jo spoke at the WEF in Davos about reducing their exposure to US Treasuries and asked if it's continuing this year. I also noted that while the depreciation of the US dollar hit them last year, it wasn't as much as their peers.

Jo replied:

You're right, what we did early in 2025 was to reduce our exposure to US dollar and US Treasuries. I think that meant our currency hit was lower than some of our peers as a result of that in terms of the US dollar, Canadian dollar translation.

I think we still see questions about the strength of the US dollar long term, but I don't think we're that convinced to say it's going to influence our ultimate weighting to opportunities in the US. I suspect in the US, we'll just continue to be quite selective about areas where we think we've got expertise and some sort of competitive advantage. 

As you know, we've been proven to be a good custodian of strategically sensitive assets in other parts of the world. We'd hope we'd be able to be considered for those. And that's a broader landscape than it used to be, something energy production and transmission is seen as a strategically sensitive area than perhaps it was 10 years ago.

We are still active in technology in the US through our venture growth team, as well as our other successes, and an area where we have a lot of successes in financial services so continue to look at North America as a very strong platform for that as we go forward. So selective by what we're good at, selective by where we see opportunity, probably finally, selective about which things we think we actually have the ability to be seen as a collaborative and a supportive partner for all projects. 

Jo noted what the venture growth team brings is not only some good investments which are performing very well, but also expertise and understanding of what's happening in the disruptive areas of technology, which we can feed back into the rest of the planet.

Lastly, I asked Jo one last question, more of a philosophical question, meaning we saw the Maple 8 funds over the last 20 years shift their assets from public to private markets, where that was supposed to be the area of value creation. And now there are a lot of critics that are saying this shift towards private markets, it has run its course, and basically the funds should shift back to public markets. I asked him how he would respond to these critics?

Jo replied:

I'd say that Ontario Teachers' over 35 years made a lot of money out of private equity. Point 1. Point 2 is when you've made a lot of money in a certain area, you want to move away from that with some thought and trepidation. And then finally, we equally have to be objective and say how things change, which means it's fundamentally a different value proposition to what we've seen in the past, or the way we get paid for the risk we take and the lack of liquidity is is different, and that's those are the two questions I think we need to keep an eye on as we go forward.

But look, we have a very good portfolio. We have talented investors. We've invested in that area, but the idea is I think there is a prize for Teachers' to be one of the few investors in the sovereign wealth/ pension fund community capable of investing directly in great companies in the private space. And if that's the prize by staying with what we're doing at the moment, I think we will look at that first and then move away from that when the evidence is pretty compelling that we don't make enough return.

He added this in terms of what they're worried about in 2026 and how they're positioning the portfolio:

I think we need to get the right balance, which is to say, we're making the right steps to keep the plan funded. The portfolio at the moment, has been in 2026 performing pretty well. We have got a resilient portfolio which generally does pretty well when things get difficult. And the decision for us is actually trying to look ahead and say, where do we make adjustments more than something completely comprehensive as a change to our approach? So the adjustments are probably going to be in what sort of the right approach to inflation, what's the right approach to future growth around the companies we're already invested in, and we may choose to back in the next few months. 

And in terms of his expectations, Jo was very clear:

I'm very keen for everyone at Ontario Teachers' to be clear about what we're asking them to do, and they're accountable for the outcomes of what they've done. That has been a very strong message for everybody over the last 24 to 36 months, and we're very fortunate here to be an investor at scale, accessing international opportunities with a super support team around everybody. 

Great discussion, I thank Jo, Gillian and Stephen once again for taking the time to talk to me to share all this. 

In sum, it wasn't a great year for Ontario Teachers' but their diversified portfolio helped them overcome challenges in private markets and the plan remains fully funded.  

More importantly, they are implementing the right steps to ensure better focus, performance and outcomes, so I expect them to bounce back strongly in the next couple of years. 

Please take the time to read their 2025 annual report for a lot more insights. 

Below, Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan President & CEO Jo Taylor says the pension has cut exposure to US Dollar and Treasuries. He speaks to BTV's Jonathan Ferro, Lisa Abramowicz and Annmarie Hordern on the sidelines of the 2026 World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland (January).

Also, Jo Taylor tells CNBC’s Dan Murphy in Davos that he’s closely watching geopolitical spillovers in financial markets. While volatility should be seen as a buying opportunity, Taylor emphasizes investors must “know what you own” during uncertain times.

La Caisse Invests $240M in Cologix’s MTL 8 Data Centre

Monte Steward of Connect Canada CRE reports La Caisse Invests $240M in Cologix’s MTL 8 Data Centre:

La Caisse has provided $240 million in senior financing for Cologix’s MTL8 colocation data centre in Montreal.

The global investment group announced the financing agreement with Cologix, a North American network-neutral interconnection and hyperscale edge data-centre company. Construction of the facility’s structure and building envelope has been completed, and the AI-ready data centre is now in service. La Caisse supplied the entire debt financing to support Cologix’s continued investment in the site.

Located in Technoparc Montréal near Montreal–Pierre Elliott Trudeau International Airport, the MTL8 facility will deliver 21 megawatts of capacity and is powered by hydroelectricity. The site integrates with Cologix’s interconnection network across its 11 other Montreal facilities.

In 2025, the MTL8 data centre achieved LEED Gold certification, confirming its sustainability features meet high green building standards and making it one of the first facilities of its kind to earn the distinction. Cologix plans to use MTL 8 as a model for more green data centres.

“For close to a decade, we’ve invested in high-quality digital infrastructure assets that deliver long-term value, supported by strong fundamentals and growing demand for hyperscale capacity and computing power,” said Jérôme Marquis, managing director and head of private credit at La Caisse. “Our partnership with Cologix began in 2021, and since then, the company has reinforced its leadership across Canada and in Quebec. This third investment reflects our conviction in scalable digital-infrastructure platforms that enable businesses and communities to thrive.”

Scott Schneider, CFO for Montreal-based Cologix, said its partnership with La Caisse reflects his company’s continued commitment to invest in critical digital infrastructure across Canada.

“We have a strong, longstanding relationship with La Caisse, built on shared priorities around responsible growth, long-term value creation and supporting the growing needs of customers and communities, he said. “Together, this partnership positions us well to continue scaling infrastructure in Canada in a thoughtful, sustainable way as demand for cloud, AI and interconnected services continues to grow.”

The company operates 46 data centres in Canada and the U.S., including facilities in Montreal, Toronto, Vancouver and Calgary. 

Last week, La Caisse announced it invested CAD 240 million to advance Cologix’s AI-ready MTL8 data centre in Montreal:

La Caisse, a global investment group, and Cologix, a network-neutral interconnection and hyperscale edge data centre company in North America, announce today they have concluded an agreement for a CAD 240 million senior financing for Cologix’s Montréal MTL8 colocation data centre. Construction of the structure and building envelope are completed, and the AI-ready data centre is in service. La Caisse has provided the entirety of the debt financing to support Cologix’s continued investment in the site.

Located in Technoparc Montréal, a major aerospace and technological hub situated near the Montréal-Pierre Elliott Trudeau International Airport, the MTL8 facility will deliver 21 MW of capacity and is powered by hydroelectricity. It integrates with Cologix’s dense interconnection network across its 11 other Montréal facilities. In 2025, the MTL8 data centre achieved LEED® Gold certification, confirming its sustainability features meet the highest green building standards, and making it one of the first facilities of its kind to earn this distinction.

“For close to a decade, we’ve invested in high-quality digital infrastructure assets that deliver long-term value, supported by strong fundamentals and growing demand for hyperscale capacity and computing power,” said Jérôme Marquis, Managing Director and Head of Private Credit, La Caisse. “Our partnership with Cologix began in 2021, and since then, the company has reinforced its leadership across Canada and in Québec. This third investment reflects our conviction in scalable digital infrastructure platforms that enable businesses and communities to thrive.”

“Canada has always been a core market for Cologix and this partnership reinforces our continued commitment to investing in critical digital infrastructure across the country,” said Scott Schneider, Chief Financial Officer of Cologix. “We have a strong, longstanding relationship with La Caisse, built on shared priorities around responsible growth, long-term value creation and supporting the growing needs of customers and communities. Together, this partnership positions us well to continue scaling infrastructure in Canada in a thoughtful, sustainable way as demand for cloud, AI and interconnected services continues to grow.”

ABOUT COLOGIX

Cologix powers digital infrastructure with 45+ hyperscale edge data centers and interconnection hubs across 13 North American markets, providing high-density, ultra-low latency solutions for cloud providers, carriers and enterprises. With AI-ready, industry-leading facilities, Cologix offers scalable, flexible and sustainable data center options to help its customers accelerate their business at the digital edge. Cologix provides extensive physical and virtual connections, including Access Marketplace, where customers gain fast, reliable and self-service provisioning for on-demand connectivity. For more information, visit cologix.com or follow us on LinkedIn and X.

ABOUT LA CAISSE

At La Caisse, formerly CDPQ, we have invested for 60 years with a dual mandate: generate optimal long-term returns for our 48 depositors, who represent over 6 million Quebecers, and contribute to Québec’s economic development.

As a global investment group, we’re active in the major financial markets, private equity, infrastructure, real estate and private credit. As at December 31, 2025, La Caisse’s net assets totalled CAD 517 billion. For more information, visit lacaisse.com or consult our LinkedIn or Instagram pages.

After reading more about Cologix and what they do, I'm not surprised La Caisse partnered with them in 2021 and has provided the entirety of the debt financing to support the company's Montréal MTL8 colocation data centre.

In short, this is an extremely impressive company:


 

 

Even more impressive, Cologix is a leader in sustainability in its industry.

For example, I read these highlights from its fourth annual ESG report:

At Cologix, we aim to achieve more while considering the resources we deploy across our footprint. Scaling Sustainably means we grow carefully, we hire thoughtfully and we make decisions based on Cologix’s goals for our employees, customers and communities. One cannot succeed without the others.

We are pleased to share our accomplishments in 2023 across our environmental, social and governance initiatives, which include:

  • Reaching 68% carbon-free energy usage across our footprint
  • Introducing our ESG Key Performance Indicators that align with our ESG Strategy and Roadmap
  • Quantified Scope 3 carbon emissions data and reported publicly for the first time
  • Completed certification of five of our U.S. facilities by ENERGY STAR®
  • Continued to align our capital expenditure process with our ESG Roadmap. Since 2016, we have spent more than $32M in ESG-related CapEx
  • Continued quarterly diversity, equity and inclusion-related training with 100% completion by active employees
  • In early 2024, developed a new suite of stand-alone policies for our team including Human Rights, Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, Anti-Bribery and Anti-Corruption and Whistleblower Guidelines.

I am incredibly proud of what we have accomplished together in the last year. We are excited to continue to build on these goals and enhance our efforts in 2024, and I am confident that as a team we can achieve more. Read our latest report to learn more about our work toward ESG excellence, and feel free to provide feedback at esg@cologix.com.

 What else? I read a white paper on their site on how they are transforming data centers for the AI era: 

AI is rapidly transforming industries, driving explosive growth in compute power and data center demand. With AI workloads requiring up to 200 kW per rack—far beyond traditional capacities—data centers must evolve to support this shift.

At Cologix, we build and retrofit data centers designed for AI’s unique needs, delivering advanced power density, innovative cooling solutions, and low-latency connectivity. Our infrastructure meets the rising demands of AI while addressing scalability, reliability, and sustainability, helping businesses stay ahead in the fast-paced AI revolution.

Unlock the future of AI infrastructure, download the full white paper now!

AI infrastructure and Data Center FAQs

1. What makes Cologix’s data centers AI-ready compared to traditional facilities?

Traditional data centers typically handle up to 45 kW per rack, but AI workloads now demand densities up to 135 kW — with some projections reaching 200 kW per rack. Cologix addresses this through purpose-built infrastructure featuring advanced Direct-to-Chip (DTC) cooling systems that support 60-120 kW per rack, multi-megawatt ScalelogixSM campuses for hyperscale deployments and strategic edge locations across 45+ data centers in 12 North American markets. Our facilities incorporate extended cold aisle designs, comprehensive power planning and robust connectivity ecosystems specifically engineered for AI workloads’ unique requirements.

2. How does Cologix solve the power challenges facing AI deployments?

AI’s explosive growth is driving data center power consumption from 4.4% of total U.S. electricity in 2023 to a projected 6.7-12% by 2028. Cologix tackles this through a comprehensive energy strategy featuring diverse power sources, with over 60% of our footprint already carbon-free and Canadian sites operating with 98% renewable energy. We partner strategically with utilities like AEP Ohio, invest in innovative energy technologies and design flexible power solutions that accommodate both AI startups scaling incrementally and established providers with consistent high-density power demands across our scalable campus environments.

3. What cooling solutions does Cologix offer for high-density AI workloads?

High-density AI servers generate significant heat that overwhelms traditional air cooling methods. Cologix implements advanced cooling technologies including Direct-to-Chip (DTC) cooling, which circulates liquid coolant directly to high-power components like GPUs and TPUs. This targeted approach enables safe, efficient operation at power densities between 60-120 kW per rack while maintaining operational stability. We complement DTC systems with extended cold aisle designs and leverage Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) analysis to optimize cooling layouts for each customer’s specific configuration, ensuring maximum infrastructure efficiency and reliability.

4. How does Cologix support GPU as a Service (GPUaaS) providers?

The GPUaaS market is reshaping cloud computing by providing scalable, high-performance computing specifically for AI, machine learning and deep learning applications. Cologix enables this transformation through infrastructure that delivers the power density, advanced cooling, and robust connectivity that GPUaaS providers require. Our facilities offer direct onramps, diverse carrier options and low-latency connectivity essential for distributed AI workloads. With strategically positioned edge locations and hyperscale campuses, we provide the flexible foundation GPUaaS companies need to scale efficiently while meeting demanding bandwidth and latency requirements.

5. What sustainability initiatives does Cologix implement for AI infrastructure?

Recognizing AI’s growing energy demands, Cologix maintains a strong commitment to environmental responsibility with over 60% of our power footprint already carbon-free and Canadian facilities operating with 98% renewable energy. Our comprehensive energy strategy deploys diverse power sources, strategic utility partnerships and investments in innovative technologies to ensure reliable, lower-emission power delivery. We work closely with regional utilities to optimize power solutions and adapt to local energy needs while supporting customers’ long-term sustainability goals, proving that high-performance AI infrastructure and environmental stewardship can coexist effectively.

I am basically offering you a glimpse into this amazing company, and you understand why La Caisse is financing its Montréal MTL8 colocation data centre.

The company checks off all the boxes, including sustainability, and is growing extremely fast. 

And with smart financing deals like this, yes, La Caisse can double its allocation to private credit in the next five years.

Alright, let me wrap it up there, I like this deal a lot, and that's why I covered it in a bit more detail. 

Below, discover the strategic advantage of Cologix's Montréal Data Centers, offering approximately 1 million square feet across 12 facilities in and around the city. With direct connections to major cloud providers like Amazon Web Services, Google Cloud Platform, IBM Cloud, Microsoft Azure, and Oracle, plus access to over 100 network service providers, Cologix ensures low latency and high-speed connectivity.

Also, in this episode of The Deep Edge Podcast, host Ray Mota sits down with Callum Morrison, Account Director at Cologix, and Wayne Lloyd, CEO of Consensus Core, to discuss their pioneering partnership that is reshaping North America’s AI infrastructure landscape. 

The guests delve into the launch of the first NVIDIA-powered GPU-as-a-Service (GPUaaS) at Cologix’s MTL10 data center in Montreal, exploring how scalable, on-demand GPU resources are empowering businesses in AI, machine learning, and 3D rendering. 

The conversation covers the strategic role of connectivity and interconnection in delivering optimal performance for AI applications, Canada’s emergence as a global AI infrastructure hub, and the vision for AI-ready data centers poised to support future edge innovations.

CAAT CEO Derek Dobson Resigns, New Leadership Team Announced

James Bradshaw of the Globe and Mail reports CAAT CEO Derek Dobson resigns, agrees to repay $1.6-million vacation payout:

The CAAT Pension Plan is parting ways with chief executive officer Derek Dobson, who has agreed to repay a controversial $1.6-million vacation payout he received last year as he ends his nearly 17-year tenure at the helm of the plan.

CAAT said in a statement on Friday that “Mr. Dobson has tendered his resignation and will leave CAAT effective immediately” as part of a settlement agreement that “brings closure to his employment at the plan.”

Mr. Dobson was placed on administrative leave last month after concerns about his leadership and the board’s oversight of his actions caused upheaval in the senior ranks of the $23-billion fund, ultimately leading to a governance crisis that has prompted an overhaul of the plan’s management.

The terms of the settlement agreement were not disclosed.

“Both Mr. Dobson and the CAAT board of trustees acknowledge the importance of moving forward in a manner that supports the long-term health of the plan and the beneficiaries it serves,” CAAT’s statement said.

Mr. Dobson said in an e-mail that he is leaving “with deep pride in what we accomplished together,” and remains “passionate about strengthening retirement income security for Canadians.”

“There is more important life-changing work to be done,” he added.

CAAT is a multiemployer pension plan that expanded rapidly during Mr. Dobson’s tenure, from $4-billion of assets to more than $23-billion today. It serves Ontario’s colleges and more than 800 public- and private-sector employers, with about 125,000 members. The plan is also in a surplus position, with $1.24 for every dollar of expected pension obligations in the future.

Ana Pereira of the Toronto Star also reports CAAT pension plan CEO resigns, will repay $1.6-million vacation payout:

The CEO of CAAT pension plan has resigned and will repay a $1.6-million vacation payout he received in 2025. 

On Friday morning, CAAT (Colleges of Applied Arts and Technology) pension plan announced in a news release that Derek Dobson reached a settlement agreement with the company after being put on administrative leave by the board of trustees last month. 

“Both Mr. Dobson and the CAAT board of trustees acknowledge the importance of moving forward in a manner that supports the long-term health of the plan and the beneficiaries it serves,” CAAT said in the release. 

The $1.6-million vacation payout was among concerns cited by three senior executives who abruptly left the organization in January, leading to a governance upheaval at the plan and several other leadership changes. Another concern was related to the CEO’s sanctioned relationship with a co-worker. 

Corporate governance experts told the Star that the sheer amount Dobson received in lieu of taking vacation is “exceptional” and a “red flag,” and that secrecy surrounding his compensation threatens to erode trust in the company.

The non-profit pension plan, which manages the retirement dollars for 125,000 members (including Toronto Star employees), has launched a governance review, which is still underway. 

“The independent governance review is progressing well,” said CAAT spokesperson Stephen Hewitt. “The board will provide an update following its conclusion.” 

Dobson had been the head of CAAT since 2009, when the plan held $4 billion in assets. Today, the organization manages $23 billion. 

“After nearly 17 years as CEO and plan manager of the CAAT pension plan, I am concluding my tenure with deep pride in what we accomplished together,” Dobson wrote in an emailed statement to the Star. 

“I have been privileged to work alongside extraordinary people who shared a similar purpose of improving retirement income security for Canadians.” 

In light of the three senior executive departures, the Ontario Public Service Employees Union (OPSEU), which appoints five trustees to the board, suspended former board chair Don Smith in January. 

The union alleged that Smith and former vice-chair, Kareen Stangherlin, acted outside the policies and procedures of the plan and made decisions about the CEO’s compensation without informing the other members of the board.

Smith was subsequently fired and Stangherlin resigned. She previously told the Star that the accusations against her are not true. 

Smith and Stangherlin did not immediately reply to the Star’s request for comment regarding Dobson’s resignation. 

Also Friday, CAAT announced a new leadership team as part of the plan’s effort to restore trust. The plan is well-funded, with $1.24 in assets for every dollar of promised benefits.  

Earlier today, the CAAT Board of Trustees announced departure of CEO and new leadership team:

  • Derek Dobson to leave CAAT effective immediately and repay 2025 vacation payout
  • New senior leadership team comprised of internal CAAT executives appointed

Toronto, March 6, 2026 — The CAAT Pension Plan (“CAAT” or “the Plan”) today announced the departure of CEO and Plan Manager Derek Dobson and unveiled a new senior leadership team to lead the organization.

Derek Dobson departure

CAAT has reached a settlement agreement with Mr. Dobson that brings closure to his employment at the Plan. As part of this agreement, Mr. Dobson has tendered his resignation and will leave CAAT effective immediately, and repay his 2025 vacation payout to CAAT.

Both Mr. Dobson and the CAAT Board of Trustees acknowledge the importance of moving forward in a manner that supports the long-term health of the Plan and the beneficiaries it serves.

CAAT also thanks the Financial Services Regulatory Authority of Ontario for its constructive engagement as the Plan continues to strengthen its governance and oversight.

New leadership team

CAAT also announced a new leadership team to execute on the Plan’s strategy, restore stakeholder trust and continue to deliver on CAAT’s pension promise to its members and sponsors.

“While the Plan has recently undergone a period of significant change, I am proud that these five senior leaders are all existing CAAT employees who will drive stability and institutional continuity while leveraging their strong internal relationships to engage and inspire our teams as they serve our member constituents every day,” said acting CAAT CEO and Plan Manager Kevin Fahey.

The following five leaders will report directly to Mr. Fahey:

  • Laura Foster, appointed interim Chief Financial Officer
  • Jillian Kennedy, appointed Chief Operating Officer
  • James Fera, appointed Chief Legal Officer & General Counsel
  • John Baiocco, appointed Senior Vice President, Funding & Sustainability
  • Stephen Hewitt, appointed Senior Director of Communications

Mr. Fahey will also continue to serve as the Plan’s Chief Investment Officer. A search for a Chief Human Resources Officer remains ongoing.

“On behalf of the Board, I’d like to thank Kevin for his strong leadership since his appointment as the Plan’s acting CEO and the impressive progress he has made in a very short period of time,” said CAAT Board of Trustees Chair Audrey Wubbenhorst. “The Board continues to focus on its work in the best interests of members and I would also like to express our gratitude to all of our stakeholders for their ongoing trust and confidence in the Plan.”

CAAT remains one of Canada’s most sustainable and well-funded pension plans. Its most recent independent valuations show the Plan at a 124% funded status, meaning that for every $1 of pension benefits CAAT has promised to members, the Plan has $1.24 in assets. With more than $23 billion in assets and over $6 billion in funding reserves, the Plan is well positioned to withstand market volatility, demographic change, and other risks.

About CAAT

Established in 1967, the CAAT Pension Plan is an independent, jointly governed plan that offers highly desirable modern defined benefit pensions. Originally created to support the Ontario college system, the CAAT Plan now proudly serves more than 800 participating employers in 20 industries, including the for-profit, non-profit, and broader public sectors. It currently has more than 125,000 members. The CAAT Plan is respected for its pension and investment management expertise and focus on stability and benefit security. On January 1, 2025, the Plan was 124% funded on a going-concern basis. 

Learn more at: www.caatpension.ca.  

For his part, Derek Dobson posted this message on LinkedIn which he also emailed to me and others earlier today:

After nearly seventeen years as CEO and Plan Manager of the CAAT Pension Plan, I am concluding my tenure with deep pride in what we accomplished together. When I joined CAAT in 2009, the Plan served 33,000 members and held $4 billion in assets and was in a funding deficit. 

Today, CAAT supports more than 125,000 members across 800 employers in 20 industries nationwide, with assets exceeding $25 billion and over $6 billion in funding reserves to keep the pension plan secure indefinitely.

I have been privileged to work alongside extraordinary people who shared a similar purpose of improving retirement income security for Canadians.

I have deep appreciation for those who transformed CAAT into one of Canada’s most respected and innovative pension plans. Together, we launched internationally award‑winning programs such as DBplus and GROWTHplus, strengthened the Plan’s funded status, and most importantly helped members and employers across Canada meet their goals. I am grateful for the trust placed in me over the years and the many milestones we achieved together.

I want to thank the many colleagues, partners, and stakeholders who have made this journey so meaningful. 

As I look ahead, I am excited to continue contributing to making Canada better for today and tomorrow. I remain passionate about strengthening retirement income security for Canadians. There is more important life-changing work to be done. 

Alright, it's Friday, my week off went nowhere because there were important items to cover in the pension world (there always are).

My thoughts on the latest developments at CAAT Pension Plan. 

Well, to be frank, I'm not surprised. 

The writing was on the wall. I knew Derek Dobson's days were numbered, and he was asked to resign, which he did and they put the Plan first by agreeing to terms.

The headlines say he also agreed to repay his $1.6 million vacation pay that was wrongfully awarded to him by the former chair and vice-chair.

But the terms of the settlement were not disclosed, and I wouldn't be surprised if Derek Dobson negotiated a nice settlement upwards of $2-3 million to walk away cleanly. 

That's fine. He spent 17 years leading the CAAT Pension Plan, accomplished a lot during that period, and deserves a fair settlement (in my opinion, all settlements should be made public).

To be brutally honest, for 17 years, Derek Dobson was CAAT Pension Plan, and that in itself was a problem because he was involved in every aspect of the Plan and was the public figurehead for it (there wasn't much succession planning there).

Members trusted him implicitly and it's a shame he's leaving the organization under these circumstances, but he also has a lot to be proud of and did leave it in great financial shape.

Now it's time for CAAT Pension Plan to turn the page under a new board of directors and a new leadership team.

I've said it before, Kevin Fahey is going to make an outstanding CIO, and I'm confident in his ability to assume a larger responsibility and also act as CEO and Plan Manager at this critical juncture.

More importantly, CAAT's Board has full confidence in him to assume this huge responsibility.

Of course, it goes without saying that Kevin Fahey a lot on his plate. He really needs to manage his time and objectives properly if he wants to continue growing CAAT's membership and delivering solid long-term returns.

That means the people who now report to him on the investment, finance, and other key areas need to also step up to the plate and support him, now more than ever.

His first job is stability and focus on riding out this turbulent time at CAAT and the markets.

Once the dust settles, he can focus on other objectives like growing the membership. 

But first focus on stability, stability, and stability; the rest will fall into place.

What happens to the three senior execs who departed the organization after informing the Board of their concerns?

Unfortunately, they're gone, not coming back. They are probably negotiating their own settlements or have already done so (again, details are not disclosed). 

The same goes for the employee who was in a relationship with Derek Dobson, she was placed on administrative leave and she's probably also negotiating her settlement. 

And what about the independent governance study that CAAT's Board commissioned? 

That will eventually be made public and I'm looking forward to reading the findings.

Whatever the findings, however, it's time to put this governance crisis behind CAAT and focus on the future.

This is an important pension plan in Canada, and it has a very bright future. 

On that note, wish everyone a great weekend and I will leave you with some market clips. 

Below, the CNBC Investment Committee debate how to play the volatile markets and whether investors should buy the dip or not (from March 5th)>

Next, Dan Niles, Niles Investment Management founder, joins 'Power Lunch' to discuss the broader market sell-off, recent software stock performance and much more (March 5th).

Third, the CNBC Investment Committee debate what $90 Oil means to the market and how you should navigate it (March 6th).

Fourth, Jan Hatzius, chief economist at Goldman Sachs, joins 'Squawk on the Street' to discuss the latest jobs report, market themes, and more.

Fifth, Rick Rieder, CIO of global fixed income at BlackRock, says “the economy and employment are quite different conditions,” as he reacts to the February jobs report and explains why he still sees 2.5% - 3% US economic growth in the first quarter.

Lastly, concerns have been bubbling up over the $1.8 trillion private credit market in recent weeks, with investors spooked in part by the risk of artificial intelligence on some borrowers and worries about valuations. Last month, a Blue Owl Capital Inc. fund opted to halt quarterly redemptions and started selling assets to return money to investors. 

This week, Blackstone Inc.’s flagship private credit fund allowed investors to redeem a record 7.9% of shares. Worries have mounted more broadly in credit markets following a spate of high-profile corporate collapses, most recently of UK-based Market Financial Solutions Ltd. Banco Santander SA Executive Chair Ana Botin likened hits from bad loans to jellyfish stings, after her bank was reported to be exposed to the mortgage finance firm. JPMorgan Chase & Co. CEO Jamie Dimon has spoken of failed corporate borrowers as “cockroaches,” suggesting there could be more. 

Bloomberg News Chief Correspondent for Private Capital Davide Scigliuzzo joins Bloomberg Businessweek Daily to discuss. He speaks with Carol Massar and Tim Stenovec. With record fundraising after the 2008 financial crisis, direct-lending vehicles have loosened their underwriting standards and are due for a stress test, according to a Pacific Investment Management Co. analysis of private-credit risks.