Ontario Teachers’ Returns 1.9% in 2023

Losses in infrastructure and real estate offset strong equity returns for the fund. 



The Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan
announced it returned 1.9% in 2023, significantly underperforming its benchmark of 8.7%. The fund saw its assets grow to C $247.5 billion ($183.41 billion) in 2023, with the fund setting a goal of reaching C$300 billion in assets by 2030.

Poor returns were attributed to losses from real estate and infrastructure investments offsetting strong performance in equities and credit. 

The benchmark underperformance was driven by several factors, including a relative underexposure in listed equities, which performed strongly through the year, as well as valuation adjustments in the infrastructure and real estate portfolios due to higher interest rates and asset-specific events that negatively impacted select investments,” fund officials wrote in a release. 

Ontario Teachers’, formed in 1990, has posted annualized one, five and 10-year returns of 1.9%, 7.2% and 7.6%, respectively.

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Public equity, private equity and venture growth returned 20%, 3.6% and negative 0.7% in 2023, compared with benchmarks of 20.3%, 16.3% and 12.8%, respectively. These asset classes represent 10%, 34% and 3% of the portfolio.

Credit, 16% of the portfolio, returned 9.1%, slightly less than the fund’s 9.6% benchmark.

Bonds and real-rate products returned 0.6% and 7.3%, respectively, with these fixed-income assets meeting their benchmarks. These two assets comprised 35% and 4% of the fund’s portfolio.

Inflation-sensitive assets like commodities and inflation hedge assets returned negative 0.5% and negative 3%, matching their benchmarks, with natural resources returning 0.2%, less than their 3.3% benchmark. These assets made up 9%, 5% and 5% of the portfolio, respectively.

Finally, real assets like real estate and infrastructure returned negative 5.9% and negative 2.8%, well off of the benchmarks of 2% and 7.6%, respectively. These two assets comprise 12% and 16% of the portfolio.

These returns are not what was expected, Jo Taylor, Ontario Teachers’ president and CEO, noted in the release: “While we advanced key strategic areas of focus in 2023, we did not generate investment results to desired levels. This was largely due to positioning the portfolio for a more challenging economic environment than ultimately transpired, our relatively lower exposure to public equities, and valuation adjustments in certain real estate and infrastructure assets.”

The pension fund, like many other Canadian funds, has a surplus in funding. Ontario Teachers’ reported a funding surplus of C$19.1 billion by the end of 2023. The fund also reported investment income of C$5.5 billion, contributions of C$3.3 billion, C$7.6 billion in benefits paid and administrative expenses of C$0.9 billion.

“We remain fully funded and delivered a positive return, which are both important financial metrics for our members,” Taylor said in the statement. “As a pension plan with multi-generational liabilities, our investment strategy is intentionally designed for stable long-term returns.”

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Tall Order: Bulls Hope Reddit’s Fledgling Stock Will Lift the IPO Curse

Previous supposedly hot offerings, like Instacart, did nothing to help the tattered new-issue market.



Social media site Reddit Inc. is poised to go public, raising a potential $750 million, the first tech company to do an initial public offering this year. Bullish dealmakers hope it is a harbinger of a turnaround in the IPO slump.

Reddit, a message board website with an ardent user base, may be the spark that Wall Street has been waiting for to cure the IPO malaise, wrote Brianne Lynch, head of market insight at EquityZen, a trading platform for privately held shares in firms usually eyeing a public listing. “A lot of companies are waiting for one company to go out and have this blockbuster IPO, and then that will encourage others to follow,” she commented.

In its filing Monday, Reddit set a share price range of $31 to $34, aiming to raise as much as $750 million. The IPO likely will take place before the end of March. Like many young tech outfits, Reddit—founded in 2005—is in the red, although in 2023, it halved losses from the year before, to $91 million.

Reddit does have some factors in its favor, as it was the go-to forum for young stock aficionados during the 2021 meme stocks craze. The hope is that these enthusiasts will fuel a strong showing for Reddit stock once it goes public.

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Loyal Redditors, as users are known, will be able to buy shares at the offering price right before the stock goes public, an advantage normally reserved for big backers. Among existing bigshot investors: artificial intelligence star and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, who holds a private stake in the firm, which will be around 7% once the stock goes on sale.

In general, the public offering picture is not inspiring. Thus far in 2024, there have been only 33 IPOs. For the first three months of 2023, 44 companies had gone public. The IPO recovery has sputtered this decade. The record for the 21st century is 2021’s 1,035 offerings. That total dwindled to 181 in 2022, then to 154 in 2023.

But it remains to be seen whether Reddit will have the bang-up debut that will lift the IPO market’s curse. Lynch pinpointed three highly lauded 2023 IPOs that failed to light a broader fire: Instacart, Birkenstock and Arm .

Grocery delivery service Instacart (IPO funds raised: $660 million), formally known as Maplebear Inc., slumped to two-thirds of its September 2023 offering price before  it rallied in just the last few weeks with the market’s overall surge. Instacart is currently up 15% from its October 2023 launch.

German shoemaker Birkenstock Holding ($1.5 billion) fell 13% in the first day of its October 2023 opening. Then it inched north and sits just $1 above its offering price. Shoe sales were helped by the blockbuster film “Barbie,” where Margot Robbie, in the title role, wore a pair of pink Birkenstocks. The product-placement movie scene had no detectable influence on the company’s stock situation, though.

British chip designer Arm Holdings ($5.2 billion) traded down for the first half of its six months in the public market before at long last taking wing a month ago on the artificial intelligence updraft. Since early February, it has soared to double its IPO price. It is 90% owned by parent SoftBank Group, the Japanese conglomerate.

“Reddit is a platform that really gave a big voice to the retail investor during the whole meme stock frenzy,” strategist Lynch wrote, adding that this group possibly could lift Reddit stock to solid gains. On the other hand, a lot of their pet meme stocks crashed and burned.

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