By
Jul 14, 2021 (Gmt+09:00)
The National Pension Service (NPS) has revised internal regulations to authorize its working-level officials to proceed with deals worth less than $100 million apiece, a move the South Korean pension fund expects to boost its small-size alternative investments by $1 billion annually.
On top of the increased ticket size subject to its review from the previous $50 million, the pension scheme's alternative investment subcommittee is now responsible for co-investments with NPS-backed funds and a commitment of up to $100 million to an offshoot of the project where the NPS has already participated. Examples of the offshoots include the redevelopment or renovation of the facilities in which the NPS has invested, or acquisition of nearby land or annex buildings.
The NPS disclosed the internal regulation revisions on July 12.
The subcommittee composed of its working-level officials, or team heads, is also in charge of follow-on equity investments in the assets or projects where the world's No. 3 pension fund has already been involved.
The decision to empower the NPS's team heads to push ahead with deals each worth less than $100 million is aimed at speeding up its investment execution. Assets under management at the pension fund are forecast to top $1 trillion in coming years versus $775 billion at the end of last year.
Under the revised internal rules, the pension scheme expects its alternative investments of less than $100 million to increase by an additional 15 to 20 deals for a combined 1 trillion to 1.3 trillion won ($870 million-$1.1 billion) per year.
Its higher decision-making body, or the alternative investment committee chaired by Chief Investment Officer Ahn Hyo-joon, will concentrate on bigger-size investment opportunities, according to the NPS.
Jul 09, 2021 (Gmt+09:00)
May 26, 2021 (Gmt+09:00)
May 06, 2019 (Gmt+09:00)