Temasek is broadening its investments as those holdings will capitalize on the increasing medical needs of aging societies mainly in the developed world and a growing middle class bolstering consumption in emerging markets. The share of life sciences and agriculture in the investment firm’s portfolio tripled in two years to 3 percent and the share of an asset class that includes consumer goods and real estate gained to 15 percent from 11 percent in the period.
«Temasek is quite astute in monitoring and exploiting broad secular trends," Patrick Schena,
Temasek’s value of new investments was the highest in seven years at S$30 billion ($22.2 billion) and it made record divestments of S$19 billion, the firm said in its annual report released on Tuesday.
Record Holdings
That helped swell the value of its holdings 19 percent to a record S$266 billion, while the total shareholder return, which includes dividends, increased to 19.2 percent from 1.5 percent in the previous fiscal year.
Temasek invested in Global Health, an Indian owner of the Medanta franchise of multispecialty care hospitals, it said. It also bought assets in Cofco International Ltd., which holds a controlling stake in Nidera and Noble Agri, both international agriculture supply chain managers.
«Like other sovereign wealth funds such as China Investment Corp., Temasek’s appetite for agriculture deals seems to stem partly from concerns about
The Kuwait and Qatari sovereign wealth funds also are increasing investments in biotechnology and life sciences, and agriculture, said Schena at Tufts.
Demographic Changes
Temasek’s new investments in life sciences tie in with the change in how the global population is composed. The number of people 60 years and older will more than double to 2 billion in 2050, according to the World Health Organization. That will require more medical treatment as illnesses like arthritis, osteoporosis and mental and neurological disorders increase. The WHO estimates that the number of people with dementia will triple to 135 million by 2050.
While the Singapore
Temasek and its subsidiaries last year were very active investors in digital assets, across a variety of sectors, including
«Is it a trend away from ‘traditional’ assets like industrial, finance?," he said. «Perhaps. But perhaps too less a shift away from, and more motivated by opportunities defined by discrete secular movements.»