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Old 11-14-2024, 09:30 PM
roper1 roper1 is offline
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Default UCP fires AIMCO board

Wow, didn't see that one coming.............The entire board. Went from the darling of the APP to gonzo?
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Old 11-14-2024, 09:33 PM
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I’ve heard that UCP offered Mr.Harper a leadership position….
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Old 11-15-2024, 12:57 AM
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I made the comment in 2021 on LinkedIn that appointing Siddal was a HUGE mistake when he was first appointed. He screwed up CMHC beyond all belief, how could the board accept him as the best candidate to lead AIMCo? Leopards don't change their spots. Past performance is in fact predictive of future performance. He screwed up AIMCo just as bad as CMHC and it did not take him very long to do it.

The Boards appointed by the Province need a lot more focus on competence and depth of experience than has been evident in many of their large number of boards, not just AIMCo.
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Old 11-15-2024, 08:48 AM
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Unfortunately this puts a big hole in the plan to repatriate the CPP back to Alberta. AIMCo was the one supposed to administer the CPP for Albertans. Makes the government look kind of foolish for not knowing this before rolling out the discussion paper. To be fair however, AIMCo had an excellent record over many years, prior to Siddal being appointed.
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Old 11-15-2024, 09:18 AM
tranq78 tranq78 is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by roper1 View Post
Wow, didn't see that one coming.............The entire board. Went from the darling of the APP to gonzo?
Govt of Alberta fired the entire board and the chief executive.

It just shows our government is willing to make hard decisions instead of letting problems fester. One of the reasons given was the high costs relative to results. So good on the province for doing this.

Another way to look at this is to compare against another big fund, CPP.

CPP's performance relative to risk is worse than Aimco's. Their cost per employee is nuts and I don't see the federal govt willing to do anything about that. For giggles I looked at CPP's 2024 annual report. Personnel expenses for 2024 are $1.09 billion (p.96) and there are 2,125 employees (p.7). That is a paycheque of $511,529 per CPP employee.

Holy payroll deductions Batman! That's astounding, and not in a good way.

The chattering classes are speculating Stephen Harper may be appointed to the board. If so that will also set the stage for arguing Albertans' CPP be taken into our own hands. Which is a really, really good idea as far as I am concerned.

Last edited by tranq78; 11-15-2024 at 09:29 AM.
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Old 11-15-2024, 09:50 AM
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A little alarmist because that is what generates more clicks, but overall pretty good account.

https://www.bnnbloomberg.ca/business...nts-in-charge/

Public ambush sends alert to $169 billion Alberta pension: Government’s in charge
By Layan Odeh, Paula Sambo and Dawn Lim
November 15, 2024 at 8:02AM EST
Andy Willis of The Globe and Mail talks to us about Alberta firing AIMCo's CEO and board.

(Bloomberg) -- It was supposed to be a bonding experience.

Evan Siddall, then-chief executive officer of Alberta Investment Management Corp., gathered about 170 senior staff at The Westin Edmonton for a meeting and an exercise on “how to lead from a place of joy” taught by The Moth, a nonprofit dedicated to the art of storytelling.

Things quickly turned joyless.

Nate Horner, Alberta’s finance minister, showed up to tell Siddall and three other executives they no longer had jobs. The four left the building after their phones and laptops were confiscated. Horner then broke the news to the remaining Aimco employees. He also dismissed the entire board.

The public purge sent a clear message: The government of Alberta is the boss, and it’s taking back control.

Horner has temporarily become the fund manager’s chairman and sole director, and the conservative regime that rules the Canadian province plans to overhaul the firm and cut costs.

“To restore confidence in the agency, Alberta’s government has decided to reset the investment corporation’s focus with a new CEO and board,” the government of Alberta said in a statement.

Canada’s biggest pension funds — dubbed the Maple Eight – have long been the envy of peers. They’re admired as among the world’s most sophisticated money managers, known for independence from politics, managing most of their assets internally, hiring world-class talent and paying top executives millions of dollars.

Aimco has invested with elite alternative asset shops such as Blackstone Inc. and KKR & Co.

Now Aimco is controlled by a populist government, which has been considering putting an ex-politician, former Prime Minister Stephen Harper, in charge of the board. The Edmonton-based firm manages about C$169 billion ($120 billion) of public pensions plans and government funds, all of which have a stake in who’s running the show.

“No well-run firm replaces all of its executive team and whole board at once,” pension expert Alexander Dyck, a finance professor at the University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management, said in an interview. “That’s a recipe for disaster.”

Some staffers and government officials didn’t view the ousters as politically motivated, but rather as a responsible move after complaints about churn and cost under Siddall. Others see it as an attack on the Canadian model of independence that has helped the pension funds attract top talent.

Either way, the intervention has stoked panic among staff over their jobs and pay. In recent years, Aimco has lured people from firms such as Carlyle Group Inc., Royal Bank of Canada and Barclays Plc. Employees have already told acquaintances they want new jobs, anticipating the province will begin treating the pension manager like a state agency and slash their pay.

There are few leaders left at the firm who can reassure them.

Aimco has been without a permanent chairman since the end of last year, and its audit committee chair left in April. Even before last week’s deposition, Aimco experienced senior staff turnover under Siddall.

A chief legal officer and a chief corporate officer left during his tenure. Four different people held the title of chief investment officer in a little more than three years. The last, Marlene Puffer, departed in September as the Alberta government intensified pressure on the company.

To politicians, Siddall seemed disconnected from Alberta’s fiscally conservative culture, neglecting complaints about rising costs.

He grew corporate, non-investment functions and made splashy expenditures along the way, including renting an office in high-end tower One Vanderbilt in New York despite the reservations of some staff.

While an internal study showed the fund’s costs were near the bottom of its peer group in 2022, the appearance that it was spending lavishly posed a problem for the provincial government.
(Aimco annual reports)



And it wasn’t the only issue. Siddall’s positive stance on green investing and his globe-trotting irked officials in oil-rich Alberta, who preferred their pension manager to keep a lower profile.

Along with Siddall, the other senior executives dismissed by Horner included the chief legal officer, the chief of staff and the chief people, culture and engagement officer. None of those executives worked on investments directly.

This story is based on conversations with multiple people familiar with Aimco and Alberta’s government. The people asked not to be identified to discuss confidential matters; some cited concerns over retaliation. A spokesperson for Aimco declined to comment.
New offices

Siddall, the former head of Canada’s federal housing agency, became CEO of Aimco in July 2021 after it lost C$2.1 billion on a bet against market volatility that blew up when the pandemic hit.

Fast-talking and blunt, Siddall aimed to elevate Aimco’s profile on Wall Street. Hired with a mandate to revamp the operation, he created new roles such as chief technology officer. While most of staff were in Edmonton, he wanted to attract people beyond Canada, too.

Early this year, Aimco opened the office in New York in One Vanderbilt. The real estate team had suggested at least five cheaper locations for the New York office, but Siddall thought it was important to have an office that attracted staff to work, according to people familiar with the matter.

Several months earlier, Siddall had opened an outpost in Singapore to focus on investments in Asia-Pacific. Aimco’s investments in Asia stood at around 3% of total assets as of last year.

He hired GIC Pte’s Kevin Bong to lead the efforts there. Aimco, which also opened an office in Calgary in 2022, has around 600 people working from seven offices, while giving them the flexibility to work remotely. In London, Siddall caught people’s attention with a renovation to accommodate more staff.

The global expansion suggested to some within the government that the pension fund was shifting priorities away from Edmonton, where its presence has supported the city’s economy. Aimco invests more than 40% of its assets in Canada, with a large chunk of that deployed in its home province.

Alberta Teachers’ Retirement Fund, one of Aimco’s clients, said in the past it has raised issues regarding costs with both the government and the fund. Aimco management has always been transparent about expenses, according to people close to the firm.

Aimco’s clients had asked for an almost doubling of allocations to private assets, driving more costs, according to a letter from former board Vice Chair Ken Kroner to government officials.

“Aimco hired the talent necessary to support this client-led growth, and this should not be misinterpreted as evidence of costs being out of control,” he wrote, adding that fees to outside managers grew at a slower pace than assets.

But as IT and human resources budgets added up, new expenses became a flashpoint.

Staff costs ballooned by 71%, and headcount grew by 29% from 2019 to 2023, according to a statement from Horner’s office. Third-party management fees also increased by 96% during the period.
(Annual reports of the three fund)



Another source of friction: Aimco awarded a contract worth millions of dollars to BlackRock Inc. for its portfolio management software Aladdin.

Some insiders saw this as a necessary expense to replace an inferior risk-management tool. Others viewed it as an unnecessary contract that cost too much. BlackRock declined to comment.

Aimco spent C$276 million on salaries, wages and benefits in its last fiscal year, and awarded Siddall more than C$4.5 million in direct pay.

New York State Teachers’ Retirement System, a US fund that oversees a similar amount of money but relies more heavily on outside managers than Canadian funds, spent $59 million on salaries and benefits, according to its most recent annual report.

Aimco ultimately falls in the lowest third on cost relative to peers, according to a study by CEM Benchmarking for 2022, the latest such study available. Its costs were 23% lower than those of average peers.

As for returns, Aimco beat its benchmarks in two of the three years Siddall was in charge, and recent internal surveys showed employee morale substantially improving. That gave the board few reasons to question his investment judgment.

But for politicians in Alberta’s capital city, it wasn’t quite so simple.
‘First kick’

Alberta produces the vast majority of Canada’s crude oil — close to 4 million barrels a day — and its economy relies on fossil-fuel revenues for creating jobs and boosting growth. In fact, government royalties from oil and gas form a part of the pool of money Aimco manages.

The province is led by Premier Danielle Smith, a conservative and outspoken booster of the oil and gas sector who frequently fights with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s left-leaning government in Ottawa. Recently, Smith said she was “****ed” about federal draft rules to cap oil and gas emissions and vowed to challenge them.

Siddall didn’t embody Alberta’s conservatism.

A longtime public servant who has Parkinson’s disease, he increased the focus on human resources at Aimco and boosted diversity and inclusion initiatives — including hiring a chief people officer.

On Instagram, he posted photos from a COP climate conference in Egypt and reflected on Canada’s treatment of indigenous people.

While he rejected fossil-fuel divestment — a political non-starter in Alberta — he also pitched decarbonization as an attractive investment strategy.

In February, Aimco said it was creating a C$1 billion fund dedicated to the energy transition, including “low-carbon renewable energy production,” to be led by then-CIO Puffer.

Some clients complained to the government that the pension fund manager was steering away from Aimco’s principles. Others backed its direction.

Ultimately, Horner sided with the first group. The government has for months been mulling giving the chairman’s role to Harper, according to people familiar with the matter. He’s a longtime politician who led the Conservative Party of Canada to three straight election victories — and he’s deeply trusted by conservatives in Alberta.

The finance minister waited for an opening. Then came last week’s purge at the Westin hotel. More changes are certain, potentially destabilizing Aimco further.

“You’re kicking at the foundation, and the concern is that when you kick at the foundations enough, at some point they’re all gonna fall down,” said Dyck, the pension expert, speaking about Canadian pension funds in general and their history of political non-interference. “It’s just, this is the first kick.”

Last edited by Dean2; 11-15-2024 at 10:07 AM.
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Old 11-15-2024, 10:07 AM
britman101 britman101 is offline
 
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So as more comes out about this story, one can see there is more than poor performance at stake with AIMCO. In 2020 the CEO was Kevin Ubelein and under his management AIMCO lost $ 2.1 billion dollars. He was handpicked by the UCP government for the position and was finally shown the door in 2021 when Evan Siddall took over. At this point, a career bureaucrat is left babysitting the position while they look to get another CEO and replacement board members. Will Stephen Harper take the CEO position if it has been offered to him? Good question, as he sits as a director on boards right now, and gets roughly $ 50,000 US when he is booked to give a public speech. Low pressure and he is in control of what he wants to do. Sounds like a pretty good gig to me.
For now the big concern for people who have money locked up in public pension fund money is that there be independence between AIMCO and the Alberta government. The billions of dollars in this fund is for the most part pension money, and the government should treat it as such.
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Old 11-15-2024, 10:39 AM
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I like how it’s never mentioned that there was a major jump between 2021 to 2022 in salaries, wages and benefits because the Alberta teachers pension fund was transferred to AIMCo mgmt for 2022. AIMCo has and remains a pretty low cost fund manager, and aside from their major two billion dollar gaff in 2020, have been fairly consistent.

I don’t know of wiping the whole board and CEO in one stroke was the right move. It’s fine to disagree with fund direction or various actions they’ve taken, but this comes across as petty political meddling. AIMCo manages $160 billion, we want the best of the best managing that money. What experienced top level fund manager is going to want to step into the CEO role here for this clown show?
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Old 11-15-2024, 10:44 AM
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Oh, and I can’t wait for Harper to spearhead moving AIMCo’s HQ to Calgary, all based on the typical “F*** Edmonton” spite we see continually from our provincial leaders. In what other world does the governing party hate their capital city so much?
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Old 11-15-2024, 11:16 AM
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In what other world does the capital city so consistently go out of its way to be politically contrary to the rest of the province
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Old 11-15-2024, 12:00 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jungleboy View Post
In what other world does the capital city so consistently go out of its way to be politically contrary to the rest of the province
Exactly. Edmonton continually gives the middle finger to the UCP gov't an yet expects continued funding for their unicorn projects.
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Old 11-15-2024, 12:00 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jungleboy View Post
In what other world does the capital city so consistently go out of its way to be politically contrary to the rest of the province

All of the Democratic run states.
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Old 11-15-2024, 01:15 PM
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Bypassing the swear filter. A few of you gentlemen are getting a bit free and easy with the f bomb on some of these threads.

If you have to use a symbol or hide your spelling to make a post , then maybe its time to re read the forum rules.

Family friendly site and all that. Curb your language.
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