Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan

chief executive Jo Taylor said that the pension is “warehousing” capital in

public markets

after selling several assets within its

private market portfolio

last year.

The

pension plan

“sold some private equity assets” and “

our plan is to reinvest that capital

,” Taylor said in an interview with Bloomberg TV in Davos. “We are really just warehousing it until we know where we want to redeploy it.”

Ontario Teachers’ struck deals to sell some assets last year, including its stakes in airports in Copenhagen and Brussels, as well as three airports in the United Kingdom. The pension plan also agreed to sell its majority stake in India’s Sahyadri Hospitals Group.

The pension plan, which manages $269.6 billion of assets, reduced its exposure to the United States dollar and treasuries in the first quarter of last year, Taylor said, citing the “risk of a deflationary dollar.”

But as the pension plan shifted to “benign” but liquid markets, OTPP’s equity weighting stayed tilted toward the U.S.

“The U.S. is still 30 per cent, 35 per cent of our portfolio,” Taylor said. “It will be an important territory for further capital.”

In recent days, some European pension plans said that they’re cutting their exposure to the U.S. dollar amid concerns that the policies of U.S. President Donald Trump have

created credit risks

too big to ignore.

AkademikerPension, a Danish pension fund that manages around US$25 billion of savings, said it’s planning to exit U.S. Treasuries by the end of the month. Swedish pension fund Alecta said it already sold most of its U.S. Treasuries since early last year, citing the unpredictability of U.S. policy, budget deficits and national debt.

With assistance from Lisa Abramowicz, Jonathan Ferro and Annmarie Hordern.

Bloomberg.com