Thank you, Mr. Chair. My questions today will be for witness Hogan.
There are so many additional important issues that the Auditor General's office needs to audit to serve Canadians with better transparency and oversight. One of those that I and my NDP colleagues are seized with is the financialization of housing and how the federal pension plans are contributing to the displacement of renters through the Public Sector Pension Investment Board, the PSPIB, as they contract out landlords to manage their multi-family real estate assets.
I want to refer to the PSPIB special examination report out of witness Hogan's office in 2021. We know that the PSPIB is a Crown corporation. The report stated, “During our audit, the secretariat communicated the government’s funding risk tolerance and long-term real rate-of-return objective for the pension assets that the corporation managed.” They were told what those risk tolerances and rate-of-return objectives were. The report also said, “the government’s real rate-of-return objective was 3.6% for the following 10 years and 4.0% thereafter.”
That was in 2021. Today, just recently, the PSPIB annual report shows that their 10-year net annualized return is 8.3%, more than double those objectives. Those returns are partially coming off the backs of displaced renters. In fact, ACORN Canada protests that the Public Sector Pension Investment Board's stake in exploitative financialized housing is causing harm.
If we think about the PSP investment board being one of the largest billion-dollar corporate financialized landlords, it certainly requires oversight, as this is happening under the government's watch. Who is overseeing renters and protecting people from private investment and tactics like the ones the PSP Investment Board is engaging in?
I would say they're engaging in it because we know, according to documents released in response to a recent access to information request, that the PSP Investment Board owns around half of Starlight Toronto's portfolio. Starlight is actually Starlight Investments, one of the largest landlords in Canada, a privately held real estate investment and asset manager that manages over 65,000 units. Prior to founding Starlight, their CEO ran TransGlobe, which earned a reputation for ignoring tenants' requests for maintenance and faced hundreds of charges for failing to do repairs and for violations of the fire code. Starlight has also applied for more above-guideline rent increases than any other landlord in Toronto. It was one of the top evictors during the pandemic and has targeted tenant organizers with evictions.
Witness Hogan, this is the government's partner in the pension funds. Are you aware of this reality?