Sunsuper’s increasing scale and investment team enabled it to pull a $1.3 billion multi-manager international equities mandate from AMP Capital Investors and back itself by splitting the redeemed money among five managers. The $15 billion super fund withdrew the long-standing mandate with AMP Capital Investors’ core international equities fund [a multi-manager product in the Future Directions Funds (FDF) stable that is co-advised by Mercer Investment Consulting] and allocated the money itself in five customised mandates, giving it ownership of individual securities, more control over tax events and clearer visibility of the effects of currency movements, David Hartley, chief investment officer at Sunsuper, says.
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QIC’s bid to build a better lifecycle fund
Changing Stripes
Roger Ibbotson has stepped back from the investment consulting and academic fields – in which he built his reputation – to spend most of his professional time running money. He is an external advisor to Ibbotson Associates, and lectures one course at Yale University, where he is professor of finance, but spends most of his … Read more
Thomas Murray loses both local staff
Powis endures at FuturePlus
Richard Powis will continue as chief executive of FuturePlus, after a NSW Local Government-appointed board member of the services provider voted against a motion from peers to sack the embattled CEO over his role in the attempt made by Energy Industries Superannuation Scheme (EISS) to merge with the NSW Local Government Superannuation Scheme (LGSS) in 2009.
