Matt Whineray has been appointed the permanent chief executive of NZ Super Fund, after serving three months in the role on an interim basis.
Whineray stepped up to the role in March following the departure of Adrian Orr, who left NZ Super Fund to become governor of the Bank of New Zealand.
He will commence the role on July 1, 2018 and his appointment follows an extensive recruitment process.
Whineray joined the Guardians of New Zealand Superannuation, the organisation that invests the NZ$38 billion ($26.3 billion; €22.6 billion) of assets held by NZ Super Fund, in May 2008 as general manager, private markets. In 2014, he became chief investment officer overseeing the investments group, responsible for NZ Super Fund’s portfolio construction and investment activity in listed and unlisted markets, both directly and through investment managers.
During this time, Whineray led the development of the fund’s climate change investment strategy, risk allocation process and risk budget framework, and helped strengthen the Guardians’ New Zealand and international direct investment capabilities.
Prior to 2014, Whineray was at Credit Suisse in Hong Kong where he was head of financial sponsor coverage for Asia – except Japan – and was also a managing director at First NZ Capital.
Guardians chairwoman Catherine Savage said in a statement: “Mr Whineray was the standout candidate among a high-quality field of international applicants. He has been instrumental in the Guardians’ successes over the past decade and is recognised globally as a leader in institutional investment. The board has the utmost confidence in his leadership ability, intelligence and integrity.”
NZ Super Fund was established in 2003 by the New Zealand government to help pre-fund universal superannuation. The vehicle has returned 10 percent per annum (after costs and before NZ tax) since its inception, with active investment strategies adding NZ$7 billion to the fund in that time.
The vehicle bolstered its investment team in December 2017, appointing Del Hart as head of external investments and partnerships to handle global investment mandates with external managers, including unlisted investments. As at 30 April 2018, NZ Super had 5.6 percent of its total AUM allocated to timberland and 3 percent earmarked for “other private markets,” which includes agriculture.