The $2.9 billion Australian Government Employees Superannuation Trust (AGEST) has for the first time dealt an infrastructure mandate to a manager other than Industry Funds Management (IFM).
To diversify its infrastructure allocation, the public sector fund awarded $30 million to the ANZ Energy Infrastructure Trust, a vehicle that acquires or develops assets or utilities related to energy generation and distribution in Australia and New Zealand. “We wanted to get manager diversification and IFM were the only manager that we were using,” Michael Seton, AGEST chief executive officer, said. The fund would also decide later this month whether Frontier Investment Consulting would remain as its asset consultant, Seton said. AGEST put its asset consulting contract, which Frontier has held since 2000, out to tender last year.
frontier, agest, seton, decide, utilities, infrastructure, develops, zealand, chief, consultant, michael, diversification
Investments
The $80 billion Mercer Super has delivered a fourth consecutive year of double-digit returns to most members of its SmartPath lifecycle product. Global equities did a lot of heavy lifting, but chief investment officer Graeme Miller tells Investment Magazine that the fund is now looking further afield for returns.






Leave a Comment
You must be logged in to post a comment.