PNG gives PacWealth $1.1 billion

PacWealth Capital, a Port Moresby-based investment management and advisory firm, has been given a $1.1 billion mandate by Papua New Guinea’s National Superannuation Fund.

“The mandate is evidence of the evolution of financial services in PNG that is being driven by wealth creation in a range of industries including mining,” says Ian Jenkins, PacWealth’s chief executive, in a statement.

PacWealth was established in PNG last year. It invests in PNG stocks, fixed income and property and has an alliance with Ascalon Capital Managers, a unit of Westpac Banking Corp.

Nasfund was the first approved superannuation fund to be licensed by PNG’s central bank. It is the pension fund for the country’s private-sector workers and is owned by seven private-sector groups affliated with the union movement, says Adam Hill PacWealth’s chairman.

 

, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Leave a Comment

Blue skies and lawsuits power MLC Super returns higher

Global equities have driven most of MLC’s FY26 return so far, but its exposures to insurance-linked securities and “esoteric” credit have also put in the hard yards and helped the fund diversify beyond the AI thematic, according to chief investment officer Dan Farmer.

Sort content by