Ontario Pension Fund Pledges Net-Zero Emissions by 2050

The $89 billion OMERS will follow the advice of the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures.


The C$114 billion (US$89 billion) Ontario Municipal Employees’ Retirement System (OMERS) has joined a growing number of institutional investors pledging to make their portfolios net-zero of greenhouse gas emissions. The Canadian pension fund said it aims to hit that target by 2050.  

OMERS, which has already pledged to reduce the carbon intensity of its total portfolio by 20% by 2025, in line with the Paris Agreement, said it currently owns more than C$18 billion in green assets, based on the International Capital Market Association (ICMA) Green Bond Principles.

“As investors, we play an important role in working with our portfolio companies and making capital allocation decisions during the transition to a lower-carbon economy,” OMERS CIO Satish Rai said in a statement. “We believe that integrating ESG [environmental, social, and governance] factors into our investment approach is a more holistic way of assessing both value drivers and risk to deliver long-term, stable returns to our members.”

OMERS said it will follow the recommendations of the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures (TCFD) to reach its net-zero goal. TCFD is a global standard that promotes climate-related disclosures by corporations and other entities. Its framework recommends making public details about governance, strategy, risk management, and metrics and targets that are related to climate change.

The pension fund has formed a climate risk working group, which is comprised of risk professionals from each investment team and representatives from OMERS’ sustainable investing committee. The mandate of the group includes developing a framework to evaluate climate risk within the portfolio, as well as measuring the portfolio’s overall carbon footprint.

OMERS said it analyzes potential impacts to value or to risk—both positive and negative—where climate change impacts are considered material to a proposed investment. It also said that each of its asset classes has developed assessment procedures that are tailored to its investing approaches and strategies, and that it uses its influence to address climate change risks through engagement and proxy voting activities.

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In October, fellow Canadian pension fund Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec (CDPQ) announced a new climate change strategy that it will use as a road map to achieve a net-zero portfolio by2050. And in January, the Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan Board (OTPPB) also pledged to achieve net-zero carbon emissions by 2050.

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Cryptocurrency Trader ‘Coin Signals’ Pleads Guilty to Commodities Fraud

Jeremy Spence, whose trades consistently tanked, lured investors with tales of 148% returns.


Jeremy Spence, a 25-year old cryptocurrency trader known as “Coin Signals,” has pleaded guilty to commodities fraud for making false representations when soliciting over $5 million from more than 170 investors. Spence, whose investments consistently lost money, admitted to luring investors to his cryptocurrency investment scam with fictitious historical returns of up to 148%.

According to an unsealed complaint filed in the Southern District of New York, Spence, through his Twitter account and chat groups on messaging platform Discord, solicited investors to invest in cryptocurrency investment pools that he had created and managed. The largest and most active funds he ran were the Coin Signals Bitmex Fund, also known as the “CS Mex Fund,” the Coin Signals Alternative Fund, known as the “CS Alt Fund,” and the Coin Signals Long Term Fund. Investors would transfer cryptocurrency, such as Bitcoin and Ethereum to Spence for him to invest it.

Spence told investors that through the CS Mex Fund, he would invest using an online trading platform called Bitmex, which operated outside of the United States. According to its website, Bitmex offered a Bitcoin investment vehicle called a “perpetual contract,” which was described as “a derivative product that is similar to a traditional futures contract” but has “no expiry or settlement” date. The Bitmex website stated that a perpetual contract “is aimed at replicating the underlying spot market but with enhanced leverage.”

With the CS Alt Fund, Spence said he would invest in lesser-known cryptocurrencies, such as Ven, Viacoin, and ARK. For each fund, including the CS Mex Fund, Spence, or others acting on his behalf, created and managed chat rooms on Discord through which Spence communicated with investors.

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To prevent investors from making redemptions, and to continue to raise money, Spence fabricated account balances that he made available online for investors that falsely indicated they were making money with him. And in order to hide his trading losses, Spence used new investor funds to pay back other investors— the hallmark of a Ponzi scheme. According to the complaint, Spence distributed cryptocurrency worth at least approximately $2 million to investors, mostly from funds deposited by other investors.

The one count of commodities fraud Spence pleaded guilty to carries a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison. The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) also brought parallel actions against Spence.

“The bourgeoning cryptocurrency market can be attractive to investors,” Damian Williams, the US attorney for the Southern District of New York, said in a statement. “However, investors should be aware of the inherent risks, including the risk of fraud.”

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