AP3 Announces New CIO as Talent Scramble Heats Up

Swedish pension funds Alecta and AP3 have made several strategic hires following Alecta’s losses in the spring’s U.S. regional bank failures.



Alecta and AP3, two major Swedish pension funds, have recently announced multiple hires amid turmoil set in motion by Alecta’s ill-fated investments in failed U.S. banks.

Most recently, AP3 named Jonas Thulin as its new CIO, leaving a position as head of asset management at Erik Penser Bank. Thulin will replace Pablo Bernengo, who will leave AP3 in January 2024 to become CIO of Alecta.

Thulin’s appointment at AP3 is effective January 4, 2024, while Bernengo is expected to start at Alecta on January 7. Thulin has served as head of asset management at EPB for six years. Prior to that, he was the head of asset allocation at Nordea Asset Management. Thulin’s successor at EPB has not been named.

“Jonas Thulin is passionate about asset management and the financial markets, has worked with a wide range of different asset classes and has extensive knowledge about sustainability,” said Staffan Hansén, AP3’s CEO, in a translated statement. “Jonas is a good and communicative leader with excellent skills for further developing our asset management.”

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The war for talent in Swedish pensions has heated up in the wake of troubles at Alecta stemming from its soured investments in failed U.S. lenders Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank and its stake in embattled real estate company Heimstaden Bostad.

Earlier this year, many Alecta executives resigned or were forced out after the collapse of SVB and its ilk. Departures included the firm’s board chair, CEO and other key senior leaders. In its attempts to find stable footing and reinvent itself, Alecta hired several executives from AP3, including its new head of equities, Magnus Tell.

AP3, or the Third Swedish National Pension Fund (Tredje AP-fonden) has investments worth $45 billion, and Alecta‘s investments are worth about $101 billion.

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Investors Should Favor Japanese Stocks After Turnaround, Strategists Say

Their case: The once-sclerotic economy now offers good investment value and a new, shareholder-friendly spirit.




For a long time, Japan was the prime example of secular decline—an aging population, a slow-growing economy, deflation. But now there’s a compelling argument to be made that the Land of the Rising Sun, which, after all, is the world’s third-largest economy, has welcomed a new dawn—and offers alluring equity opportunities.

The catalyst is a corporate governance makeover and a shareholder activism surge, so it makes sense for investors to increase their exposure to Japanese stocks, according to many strategists. They believe that Japan’s market has an upward trend going and are pleased that its shares remain affordable: The Tokyo Stock Price Index, or TOPIX, is ahead 22% this year, beating the S&P 500’s 13.5%; the Japanese index has a price/earnings ratio of 16.2, a better value than the U.S. benchmark’s 21.5.

“Even though Japanese equities have rallied nearly 20% this year, we see structural tailwinds for further strong performance,” declared a research paper from J.P. Morgan Asset Management. Spurring the optimism is a pickup in corporate capital spending, the firm found.

Another plus is that longstanding deflation, or at best tiny inflation growth (less than 1%), seems to be gone, as a note from analysts at asset manager Schroders PLC spelled out:  “Deflation leads companies and consumers to delay investment and put off purchases; there’s little point buying something now if it will be cheaper tomorrow.”

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After finally running tiny inflation during the last decade, Japan switched back to mostly deflation in recent years—but in 2022 solid price raises returned, up 2.7%, with annual inflation for 2023 running at a 3.2% rate.

Japan’s companies now are more efficient at delivering value to investors, thanks to a rise in stock buybacks and dividends, says Jeffrey Buchbinder, chief equity strategist at LPL Financial. The Tokyo exchange has pressured member companies to “increase shareholder returns, and that’s been like a hockey stick pointing up,” he adds. The market in Japan “has had a real cultural shift.”

For U.S. investors, of course, the strong dollar is a big enticement to buy Japanese stocks. Since 2021, the yen has depreciated by one-third compared with the greenback. The Bank of Japan’s continued commitment to low rates means that the yen is unlikely to appreciate anytime soon, the JPM note reasoned.

A prominent Tokyo-based investment firm, Nikko Asset Management, is pushing the case that Japan’s stocks deserve more attention because the nation has a “stable political backdrop,” with the Liberal Democratic Party and a small ally firmly in control of parliament since 2012. “This climate of no surprises has helped create a favorable environment for businesses and long-term investors,” the firm stated in a report.

“In an era of increased polarization, Japan’s political environment is known for its stability and political continuity,” per the report. It did not need to spell out the contrast between Japan’s situation and the conditions in Washington, where the speaker of the House of Representatives was ousted last week.

Meanwhile, the Nikko paper pointed out, the new emphasis on expanding shareholder value is  helpful to Japan’s stocks. It asserted that “corporate accountability has become a growing theme in Japan.”

It also pointed to the 2022 investor revolt against the management of Canon Global, a colossus that makes cameras, semiconductors and other tech products. Fujio Matari, Canon’s chief executive and chair, barely won re-election amid complaints that the company had no women on its board. Afterward, the company pledged to add its first female director, finally nominating Ito Akiko last month.

All things considered, Nikko argued that investors nowadays will find “a lot of value in the Japanese equity market.”


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