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Multi-tasking Temasek

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Temasek is turning into a financial chimera. Where that mythical beast was part lion, goat and serpent, the Singaporean fund combines aspects of a hedge fund, private equity house and investment bank. That combination sounds good for returns, though it might not sit well with Temasek’s political ties.

First, consider Temasek’s recent opportunistic actions. It sold $2.5 billion of shares in two China banks on May 3, just weeks after buying $2.3 billion of shares in another. Temasek reportedly flipped China Construction Bank shares for 20 per cent more than it paid last November — which in turn was 20 per cent below where the shares were trading when it sold in the previous July.

The fund has also shown a taste for private-equity style financial engineering. Temasek is kingmaker in a proposed $7.2 billion takeover of Indonesia’s Bank Danamon by Singaporean bank DBS, which would leave the fund with 40 per cent of the combined group. Last year’s exchangeable bond, convertible into part of Temasek’s 18 per cent stake in Standard Chartered, reflected more cleverness than necessity.

Finally, there are shades of an investment bank. Temasek has hired big-hitting bankers like UBS Finance Director John Cryan, whose influence may explain the change of gear. So, too, may its investment-bank-like pay, which leans heavily on performance. Temasek even claws back past bonuses when the fund fails to meet its internal hurdle rate, as happened in 2010.

This combination could be just what’s needed. Temasek’s return to the finance ministry, its sole shareholder, was below five per cent in 2010, its last reported period — compared with a 20-year average of 15 per cent. Without healthy returns, it’s hard to justify the $155 billion fund’s existence. Singapore already has a bigger sovereign piggy bank in the form of foreign reserve fund GIC.

But Temasek’s cleverness may have limits. The DBS and Danamon merger has already created a nationalist debate in Indonesia which Temasek’s role as a sovereign investor has only inflamed. Regulators are now proposing a cap on foreigners’ stakes in local banks. If Temasek does well, its fund managers will get the credit; flunk, and it’s politicians who will have to clean up.

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