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National Pensions Reserve Fund Administration

Dáil Éireann Debate, Wednesday - 18 December 2013

Wednesday, 18 December 2013

Questions (61)

Michael McGrath

Question:

61. Deputy Michael McGrath asked the Minister for Finance if he will provide details of the current value, including a breakdown by asset type, of the National Pensions Reserve Fund; and the amount of the remaining value of the fund has been committed to for various purposes. [54548/13]

View answer

Written answers

The National Pensions Reserve Fund was valued at €15.6 billion at 30 September 2013. The directed portfolio (public policy investments in Allied Irish Banks and Bank of Ireland made at the direction of the Minister for Finance) was valued at €9.0 billion and the discretionary portfolio (the investment of which remains the responsibility of the NPRF Commission) was valued at €6.6 billion. The balance of the directed portfolio at 30 September 2013 included the Preference Shareholding in Bank of Ireland which as recently announced has been disposed of. I have given instructions that the proceeds arising from the Bank of Ireland preference shares transaction should remain with the NPRF for the time being.

The asset allocation of the discretionary portfolio at 30 September 2013 is set out in the following table:

Asset Class

€ m

% of Discretionary Portfolio

Large cap equity

1,245

19.0

Small cap equity

247

3.8

Emerging markets equity

475

7.2

Quoted Equity

1,967

30.0

Eurozone government bonds

160

2.4

Eurozone inflation linked bonds

121

1.8

Eurozone corporate bonds

389

5.9

Cash

1,803

27.5

Financial Assets

2,473

37.7

Private Equity

716

10.9

Property

402

6.1

Commodities

305

4.7

Infrastructure

434

6.6

Absolute return funds

248

3.8

Alternative Assets

2,105

32.1

Value of Equity Options

8

0.1

Total Discretionary Portfolio

6,553

100

As recently announced, the Government has decided to reorient the NPRF into the Ireland Strategic Investment Fund , which will allow the resources of the NPRF to be deployed towards productive investment in the Irish economy.

In the light of this reorientation and the intention to maximise the impact of ISIF investments by attracting private sector co-investment, the NPRF Commission has made a number of commitments to investments in Ireland, including a substantial number of co-investments, while remaining within the twenty per cent limit on Irish exposure which the Commission has determined to be the appropriate level of exposure to investment in this country given the Fund’s current investment mandate under the NPRF legislation. A detailed table of these NPRF commitments to investment in Ireland as at 30 September 2013 is set out in the following table:

Investment

NPRF Commitment

Capital (€m)

3rd Party Capital (€m)

Total project size

Multiple of NPRF Commitment

Innovation Fund Ireland

125

125

250

2x

Local Venture Capital Funds

69

320

389

5.5x

Irish Corporate Bonds

79

-

79

1.0x

Irish Forestry

36

187

223

6.2x

Irish Infrastructure Fund

250

66

316

1.3x

SME Equity Fund – Better Capital

125

30

155

1.2x

SME Equity Fund – Cardinal Carlyle

50

50

100

2.0x

SME Credit Fund – BlueBay

198

252

450

2.3x

Irish Water

250

-

250

1.0x

Total Committed

1,182

1,030

2,212

Expected future commitments of NPRF

81

368

449

5.5x

Total Commitments

1,263

1,398

2,661

2.1x

In addition to the above table the National Pensions Reserve Fund has provided a stand-by credit facility for the N11 and Schools Bundles 3 Public-Private Partnership projects.

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