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Thursday, November 14, 2024

Alberta government fires AIMCo board to ‘reset’ pension management fund

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Edmonton

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The province says the move comes ‘after years of AIMCo consistently failing to meet its mandated benchmark returns.’ For now, Finance Minister Nate Horner has been appointed the sole director and chair for AIMCo.

Province says it will appoint new board chair within 30 days

Madeline Smith · CBC News

·

A view of the Alberta legislature, with a brown stone dome, under a blue sky.

A view of the Alberta legislature in Edmonton, Alta. (Peter Evans/CBC)

The provincial government has removed the entire board of the Alberta Investment Management Corporation (AIMCo), saying its ballooning costs demand intervention.

In a statement Thursday afternoon, the province announced it will “reset” the focus of the government-owned pension management fund, and will be appointing a new board chair within 30 days.

The province’s statement says the move comes “after years of AIMCo consistently failing to meet its mandated benchmark returns.”

AIMCo CEO Evan Siddall and three other top executives are now out, Finance Minister Nate Horner said.

AIMCo manages nearly $170 billion in assets, according to its 2024 mid-year investment performance report.

It is responsible for the investments of several provincial government funds, including the Heritage Savings Trust Fund. It also acts as an investment manager for pension plans of hundreds of thousands of Alberta public sector workers: teachers, municipal police officers, academic and professional staff at universities and municipal and provincial public servants, among others.

For now, Horner has been appointed the sole director and chair for AIMCo.

“I’m doing this because I have to,” he told reporters at the legislature on Thursday.

A public meeting on the Heritage Savings Trust Fund, held Wednesday evening, confirmed some of AIMCo’s costs that have raised red flags for the government for some time, according to Horner.

A man wearing a suit stands at a podium. He holds a piece of paper. He looks off.

Alberta Finance Minister Nate Horner will be AIMCo’s sole director and chair for the time being. (Jason Franson/The Canadian Press)

He pointed to increasing operating costs, management fees and staffing without corresponding return on investment.

“If you’re going to see costs like this, I think you would expect them to hit their benchmark,” Horner said.

“When you have a body like this that’s managing funds like that, you’re expecting some value add, frankly. That’s what they get paid the big bucks for … and we weren’t seeing that.”

Opposition criticizes ‘drastic’ move

NDP finance critic Court Ellingson said he’s alarmed to see a government minister in charge of AIMCo, even temporarily.

“It makes Albertans question the stability of this fund. It makes Albertans question whether or not that fund really is under the thumb of the premier and the finance minister,” he said.

Ellingson also questioned the urgency and timing of such a big change.

“If they had been monitoring this for a while, they had many opportunities to do something that was not so drastic and earth-shattering as today’s move,” he said.

Horner will not make any investment decisions or receive compensation in his temporary role at AIMCo, the province said.

The appointments of 10 members of the AIMCo board of directors were rescinded in an order-in-council Thursday.

The same order-in-council appointed Horner as the board’s chair for a term to expire Sept. 30, 2025.

But the minister said a new board chair will be appointed long before that, and he expects to name an interim CEO “within days.”

The United Conservative Party government, under former premier Jason Kenney, passed a bill in 2019 requiring the Alberta Teachers’ Retirement Fund to use AIMCo as its investment manager.

The bill also required three large public sector pension plans to use only AIMCo as their investment manager.

WATCH | Province fires board of Alberta Investment Management Corporation: 

Province fires board of Alberta Investment Management Corporation

The province said it has decided to “reset” the focus of the provincial corporation, and will be appointing a new board chair within 30 days. Court Ellingson with the Alberta NDP says the move shows incompetence by the government.

In 2020, AIMCo announced a bet on market volatility led to a loss of $2.1 billion.

In the aftermath of that loss, CEO Kevin Uebelein, who had been at the helm since 2014, said he would leave the organization by June 2021. Siddall, the former head of the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp., replaced him as CEO shortly after.

AIMCo did not respond to a request for comment on Thursday.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Madeline Smith is a reporter with CBC Edmonton, covering business and technology. She was previously a health reporter for the Edmonton Journal and a city hall reporter for the Calgary Herald and StarMetro Calgary. She received a World Press Freedom Canada citation of merit in 2021 for an investigation into Calgary city council expense claims. You can reach her at madeline.smith@cbc.ca.

    With files from Janet French and Michelle Bellefontaine

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