China Investment Corporation finally has a new boss. But compared to most companies, a change of the top at a sovereign wealth fund doesn't always mean a change of tack. A sovereign fund's proximity to the government and its investment approach are critical when it comes to determining the importance, or relative unimportance, of who sits at the top.
Ding Xuedong, a career bureaucrat, may be relatively unknown in global financial circles. That needn't matter. His predecessor Lou Jiwei, who was promoted to finance minister in March, also lacked experience when he took charge of CIC when it was established in 2007.
But that didn't stop CIC from growing; the fund has more than doubled in size and now manages roughly 15 per cent of China's $3.4 trillion foreign currency reserves. CIC's domestic portfolio is dominated by legacy stakes in the country's biggest banks and the fund outsources most of its overseas investments to external money managers. Unless the fund gets a big injection of new money, it's unlikely Ding will get a chance to create waves.
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Sayed's reputation as an aggressive dealmaker is unlikely to change. But Qatar's new emir Sheikh Tamim, who is also chairman of the fund, now wants the country to "avoid arrogance". The QIA's future investments may thus focus on delivering financial rather than political returns.
At the other end of the spectrum from CIC is Singapore's Temasek. Finding a successor to Ho Ching, who has led the fund for over a decade, will be more tricky, since Ho has transformed the fund from a passive into an active investor. Temasek is also independent from the government, even though Ho herself is the prime minister's wife. That means that the buck really stops with the CEO. Few sovereign fund bosses can say that.