CPPIB Invests $200 Million into Indonesia Logistics Joint Venture

Two partnerships with logistics real estate firm LOGOS will bring up to $1 billion of warehouses in the greater Jakarta area.


The Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB) will invest $200 million into a second joint venture with logistics real estate firm LOGOS to develop assets in Indonesia.

A portfolio of third-party logistics services, data centers, and industrial warehouses will be funded by the allocator-operator partnership in the greater Jakarta area, CPPIB said this week. 

“One of the key investment themes for CPP Investments has been Asia’s growing middle class and domestic consumption,” Jimmy Phua, managing director and head of Asian real estate investments at CPPIB, said in a statement. “We are pleased to be furthering our partnership with LOGOS and strengthening our position in Indonesia’s logistics market.”

CPPIB is expanding further into warehouses to meet growing demand for deliveries for online shoppers. The Canadian pension fund previously invested with LOGOS in 2017, when it also sought to acquire and develop logistics assets in the market.

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Several logistics properties were also included in the initial venture, including Cibitung Logistics Hub, Cikarang Logistics Park, Cileungsi Distribution Centre, and Metrolink Logistics Hub. 

LOGOS, which has about $10.2 billion in assets in its Asia Pacific portfolio, said it already has several assets in mind for its newest venture that it will build and acquire over the next year. Through both ventures, it will develop up to $1 billion logistics assets over the coming years, it said. 

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Financial Journal Comptroller Pleads Guilty in Embezzlement Scheme

Eric Whitehead, of Grant’s Interest Rate Observer, faces 20 years in prison for using company assets to pay for personal expenses.


The comptroller of financial journal Grant’s Interest Rate Observer pleaded guilty to wire fraud for his role in a scheme to embezzle approximately $1.3 million from the publishing company.

Eric Whitehead, 53, pleaded guilty to one count of wire fraud, which carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison. He will be sentenced April 9.

According to court documents, from 2015 through 2020, Whitehead used wire transfers and cash deposits for his own benefit without authorization from his company. 

Whitehead allegedly used company assets to pay for personal credit card expenses, overpay personal credit cards to receive cash balance refunds, write checks to cash for deposit into personal bank accounts, and purchase precious metals to sell for a profit. Whitehead allegedly embezzled company funds for a total loss of approximately $1.3 million.

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“Eric Ian Whitehead exploited his position of trust as comptroller of a publishing company to embezzle more than $1 million from the company,” Acting U.S. Attorney Audrey Strauss said in a statement.

James Grant, an iconoclastic writer and publisher, founded Grant’s Interest Rate Observer in 1983.

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