Tuesday, July 7, 2026
ADVT 
National

CPP Fund Delivers 4.5% Return On Investments In Quarter Ended Dec. 31

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Feb, 2016 11:58 AM
    TORONTO — The CPP Investment Board says the funds it manages for the Canada Pension Plan delivered a 4.5 per cent return, after costs, in the final three months of 2015.
     
    As of Dec. 31, which marks the end of CPPIB's 2015-16 fiscal third quarter, the CPP Fund had $282.6 billion of assets — up from $272.9 billion at Sept. 30.
     
    CPP Investment board says it had $12.3 billion in net investment income over that three-month period, offset by $2.6 billion in cash outflows — following a seasonal pattern when payments often exceed contributions at the end of a calendar year.
     
    CPP Investment Board Mark Wiseman said the Canadian dollar's depreciation against most currencies, and the fund's investments in other countries, resulted in significant gains from foreign exchange.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Alberta Prisoner Dies After Overdose, Four Others Sent To Hospital

    Alberta Prisoner Dies After Overdose, Four Others Sent To Hospital
    Ryan William Witvoet, who was 31, was found unresponsive in a cell at the maximum-security Edmonton Institution on Thursday.

    Alberta Prisoner Dies After Overdose, Four Others Sent To Hospital

    Scouts Canada Says B.C. Event With Harper Broke Non-Partisan Policy

    Scouts Canada Says B.C. Event With Harper Broke Non-Partisan Policy
    OTTAWA — Scouts Canada officials say they didn't agree to have some of their young members stand in uniform alongside Conservative Leader Stephen Harper during a campaign stop earlier today.

    Scouts Canada Says B.C. Event With Harper Broke Non-Partisan Policy

    Margaret Atwood Column On Harper Hair Disappears, Then Reappears

    Margaret Atwood Column On Harper Hair Disappears, Then Reappears
    Atwood's piece was back on the newspaper's main page late Friday after being taken down mid-afternoon. The Post said in an email it was held for fact checking.

    Margaret Atwood Column On Harper Hair Disappears, Then Reappears

    Cement, Steel Groups Say Quebec Risking Safety By Allowing Taller Wood Buildings

    Cement, Steel Groups Say Quebec Risking Safety By Allowing Taller Wood Buildings
    MONTREAL — Canada's cement and steel sectors say Quebec is favouring one industry and possibly putting public safety at risk by allowing wood to be used in the construction of buildings up to 12 storeys high.

    Cement, Steel Groups Say Quebec Risking Safety By Allowing Taller Wood Buildings

    Municipalities Unprepared For 'Weather Whiplash,' Warns Top Meteorologist

    Municipalities Unprepared For 'Weather Whiplash,' Warns Top Meteorologist
    HALIFAX — A top Canadian meteorologist warns that municipalities aren't prepared to deal with the impacts of an increasingly volatile climate that can bring devastating floods one season and a drought the next.

    Municipalities Unprepared For 'Weather Whiplash,' Warns Top Meteorologist

    How A Reclusive Rural Manitoba Woman Scammed An NBA Star, Others

    How A Reclusive Rural Manitoba Woman Scammed An NBA Star, Others
    A woman who rarely left her house in northern Manitoba has admitted to impersonating several people online — including a professional athlete  — so she could receive money and gifts and live in a world of celebrity fantasy.

    How A Reclusive Rural Manitoba Woman Scammed An NBA Star, Others