Industry Finance Number of employees 296 (2016) Founded 1911 | Products Financial Services Area served South Africa | |
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Type Quasi-Public Investment Corporation Key people Daniel Matjila (CEO)Matshepo More (CFO)Paul Magula (CRF)Mcebisi Jonas (Chairman) Revenue ZAR: 1010.733 Million (2016) Total assets ZAR: 1857 Billion (2016) CEO Daniel Matjila (1 Dec 2014–30 Nov 2019) |
Elias masilela ceo of the public investment corporation part 1
The Public Investment Corporation (PIC) is a South African quasi-public investment entity with over R1.857 trillion (USD 137 Billion) of assets under management. Established in 1911, it holds large stakes in several South African companies, and is one of the entities through which the government implements its policy of Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment. The PIC is also responsible for investing the South African Government Employees Pension Fund (GEPF).
Contents
- Elias masilela ceo of the public investment corporation part 1
- Public investment corporation soc limited corporate video
- History
- Governance
- PIC clients and share of total assets under management
- Funds held under management
- Investments
- References
Public investment corporation soc limited corporate video
History
The organisation has its origin in 1911 with passing of the Public Debt Commissioners Act of 1911, a year after the formation of the Union of South Africa. Known then as the Public Debt Commissioners, it would manage the government's debt, investing the government and South African Railways and Harbours trust funds and by 1924 had taken on the provincial administrators funds as well. By the mid-1920s it would manage the granting of loans to local governments in the country. The pension funds managed would allow the government to borrow against those funds. In 1984, a new act, the Public Investment Commissioners Act No.45 of 1984, which moved its focus from debt to investment management, investing funds on behalf of government organisations, the appointment of commissioners and with the finance minister as its chairman.
With the first free election in South Africa in 1994, the Public Investment Commissioners announced the formation of the Isibaya Fund in 1995. This saw a portion of the money managed diverted to the new fund to invest in Socially Responsible Investments to target economic growth transformations in population groups disadvantaged during apartheid. The next change came in 2004 with a new act passed called the Public Investment Corporation Act of 2004, where the Public Investment Commission became legalised corporate asset managers. Now a client’s specific investment objectives would be expresses in a detailed client investment mandate which are individually negotiated with a client concerned and approved by the Financial Services Board.
Governance
The current chairman is also the South African Deputy Minister of Finance and was appointed by the Minister of Finance. The chairman is a government member mainly due to the high percentage of government pension funds under management by the Public Investment Corporation. All other directors are also appointed by Minister of Finance.
PIC clients and share of total assets under management
The following figures shows the share of the total assets under management by PIC from each public institution in South Africa as of 31 March 2016:
Funds held under management
The total assets held under management by the Public Investment Corporation as at 31 March each year are:
Investments
As a long-term investor, the Public Investment Corporation sets its objective as one to achieve returns higher than the clients have benchmarked and is spread amongst four investments areas: