Financial protection for the future, nest egg, retirement savings
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As Alberta considers exiting the Canada Pension Plan, the head of CPP Investments visited Calgary Tuesday to warn against losing its benefits.

CEO John Graham, who leads the professional organization that manages the Canada Pension Plan Fund, made the pitch to a business crowd at a luncheon event in downtown Calgary.

Graham, who did not speak to reporters, said in his speech there is a strong business and public policy case for Albertans to stay with an established global investment fund with a proven track record.

“The CPP is truly widely admired around the world as a safe and stable pension plan that we can be confident will provide for us in retirement,” Graham said.

“It’s sustainable for at least the next 75 years, meaning future generations of Canadians can count on it.”

The Canada Pension Plan fund currently has over $576 billion in assets under management and has averaged a 10-year annualized return of 10% over the past decade.

But under Premier Danielle Smith, Alberta is taking a look at a plan for the province to exit the Canada Pension Plan and set up its own provincial alternative.

The Alberta government says its workers have contributed an oversized share to the national fund and would be in line for big savings and payouts if it were to leave the CPP.

The province says it is owed $334 billion, more than half of all CPP assets, while the CPP Investment Board and economists have put the number more in line with Alberta’s representative CPP population of 15%.

Graham did not speak directly about the Alberta government Tuesday or its pension plan proposal.

Instead, he asked Albertans to consider that as a large fund, the Canada Pension Plan offers the benefit of risk pooling and diversification, which helps it weather economic downturns and changing demographics.

He added the CPP is also portable, meaning Albertans can take their pension with them if they choose to retire out-of-province.

“In a world of constant uncertainty, Albertans need to protect their financial future,” Graham said.

He also talked up CPP Investments’ track record of investing in Alberta-based oil and gas companies, and reassured the business leaders in the room that the fund will continue to invest in them — even as it also seeks to prepare for the energy transition by investing in renewables and alternative energy companies.

“We were one of the first global investors to state publicly that divesting of conventional energy investments is counter-productive to global decarbonization goals,” Graham said.

He added that $6 billion of the CPP Fund is currently invested in the oil and gas industry in Canada.

Federal Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland has said if Alberta were to exit the Canada Pension Plan it would require a “complex and multi-year process” of negotiating international social security agreements to deal with contributors who work abroad.

Last month, federal Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre encouraged Albertans to stay in the federal pension plan.

But he blamed Prime Minister Justin Trudeau for creating the conditions, through measures such as carbon pricing, that would push the province to consider other options.