Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Maple Eight

Largest Canadian pension funds From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

The Maple Eight (Maple-8 or Maple 8) refers to the largest eight Canadian pension funds. The investment approach used by the Maple-8 is known globally as the 'Canadian model', in which they utilize a direct investment approach and internally manage their own assets and portfolios. Collectively, the pension funds control approximately CA$2.4 Trillion[1] in AUM and they are heavily influential in Canadian and global investment markets.

Remove ads

The Maple-8 members

More information Pension plan, Acronym ...
Remove ads

History

Summarize
Perspective

In 1986, when the Government of Ontario sought to improve its public sector pension plans, investment strategist Keith Ambachtsheer recommended Peter Drucker's model, as outlined in his 1976 book, "The Unseen Revolution”.[13][14] Drucker posited creating a more diversified, globally oriented investment portfolio, handled by hired, not appointed, non-political professionals who received competitive remuneration, would lead to higher returns. The Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan was the first to adopt the model in 1990 then other pension plans followed. In 2012, then president of the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board, David Denison, stated, "Canada’s system was ranked fifth best in the world in the Mercer Global Pension Index study for 2011. In truth, Canada’s high ranking has more to do with the woeful state of many other countries’ retirement systems than the robustness of our own." He added that there was room for improvement but the Maple-8's sophisticated, in-house investment model saved money.[15] Ambachtsheer has stated the costs are average but the Canadian model generates a higher 10-year return compared to other funds.[16] At a 2024 symposium, OMERS president, Blake Hutcheson, stated the top Canadian pensions were not a monolith, as suggested by the term 'Maple-8,' and each investment board was unique.[17] In 2024, Mercer ranked Canada's system at 17th, down from 12th in 2023.[18][19]

The term 'Maple-8' evolved from an article in The Economist titled "Maple Revolutionaries" which originally discussed the Top Ten pension plans in Canada.[20]

Remove ads

Canadian Allocations

There has been much focus on the Maple-8's allocation to Canadian investments. Although the federal government is not involved in the operation or investment strategies of these funds, they have expressed a desire to allot more capital to Canadian investments, with suggestions of a minimum allocation. Pensions argue that their global investment strategies allow them to stabilize their returns, discovering alpha in other markets and hedge against any volatility in the Canadian market, while bringing international capital into Canada.[21][22]

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads