Daniel Fournier

For other people named Daniel Fournier, see Daniel Fournier (disambiguation).

Daniel Fournier is a Canadian businessman from Montreal, Quebec. A successful real estate investor and developer, he has been Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Ivanhoé Cambridge, a real estate subsidiary of Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec, the manager of public pension funds for the province of Québec, since June 2010. He has also run once for the Canadian House of Commons and written on Canadian federalism.

Early life and education

Fournier was born in Pierrefonds, a suburban community that was amalgamated into the City of Montreal in 2002. He has a Bachelor of Arts degree in History from Princeton University and a Bachelor of Arts degree in Jurisprudence from Exeter College at Oxford University, where he studied as a Rhodes Scholar. While studying at Oxford, he took a term off to play professionally for the Ottawa Rough Riders one of the football League's teams. He returned to Canada after graduating and became a successful figure in Montreal's real estate investment and development industry.[1]

Private career

During the 1980s, Fournier was prominent among a group of young French Canadian who were very influential in changing the real estate landscape in Montreal. He started in real estate at leading development firm Canderel where he became vice-president.[2] He subsequently launched his own investment firm, which owned and redeveloped two very well known downtown Montreal properties, the Ogilvy store and the Ritz-Carlton Montreal.[3]

Prior to joining Ivanhoé Cambridge, he was the Chairman of the Board of engineering consulting firm Genivar, now WSP Global, and a member of the Board of Directors of national retailer Canadian Tire. He was also a Director of the Summit Industrial Income REIT.

In July 2008, he was named executive vice-president and chief investment officer of SITQ, which was then the office real estate subsidiary of the Caisse.[4] He left one year later and, in June 2010, joined the Caisse as Executive Vice-President and President of its global real estate group,[5] including all office, retail, multiresidential and commercial mortgage lending businesses.

Immediately after taking office, Daniel Fournier began working on a company-wide strategic plan. The first major decision was to merge all of the Caisse’s real estate subsidiaries and assets except commercial mortgage lending (Otéra Capital) into Ivanhoé Cambridge in 2011.[6] The total assets of the merged entity then reached Cdn$31 billion and provided the critical mass necessary for future growth.

The Company’s plan involved focusing primarily on the three product lines for which it had developed a proven, in-depth expertise: retail, office and residential.[7]

Daniel Fournier also proceeded to a successful turnaround of another Caisse subsidiary, Otéra Capital, by repositioning its lending portfolio and focusing on becoming the Canadian leader in commercial real estate mortgages.

Successive years of positive returns

Five years into Daniel Fournier’s mandate as CEO of Ivanhoé Cambridge, the Company has delivered an average annual return of 13.3% to its shareholders and has repositioned no less than two thirds of its assets in more profitable investment classes. The company’s total assets reached Cdn$48 billion as at June 30, 2015.

Daniel Fournier has repeatedly expressed caution on how to perceive the successive double-digit annual returns of Ivanhoé Cambridge, reminding the market that the real estate industry is cyclical and very competitive and that high annual returns are not sustainable in the long term.[8]

Plan Montréal

One of the key pillars of Daniel Fournier’s investment approach focuses on Ivanhoé Cambridge’s leadership role in its home city of Montreal. In 2013, Ivanhoé Cambridge acquired the remaining 50% interest in flagship office complex Place Ville Marie it did not previously own, a transaction valued at over CDN$400 M.[9] This was the first of several investments in the city’s downtown core that would constitute Fournier’s CDN$1-billion “Plan Montréal”.

Another component of the “Plan Montréal” was the launch of construction of the 900 de Maisonneuve Ouest Cdn$240-million, 27-storey office project, after an agreement with Manuvie to build ”Maison Manuvie”, the financial institution’s new Montreal head office following its own acquisition of Standard Life.[10] As part of the Plan, Ivanhoé Cambridge also announced recently a Cdn$140-million renovation and upgrade project for the Queen Elizabeth Hotel in downtown Montreal.

As Daniel Fournier’s overall strategic plan for Ivanhoé Cambridge was implemented, the Company sold the vast majority of its hotels around the world. The company chose to maintain full ownership of three hotels in Quebec: the Chateau Frontenac in Quebec City, the Fairmont Queen Elizabeth Hotel in Montreal and the W Montreal, adjacent to the Company’s Montreal head office, and also decided to keep smaller interests in two Fairmont hotels in Seattle and in Toronto.

Philanthropic activities

Mr. Fournier is very dedicated to several charity and social causes and has been involved in many fundraising activities. He is currently a member of the Board of Directors of the CHU Sainte-Justine Foundation and Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the McCord Museum Foundation, both located in Montréal. He also acts as Co-Chair of the fundraising campaign of Bishop’s University, near Sherbrooke, Québec.

Political career

Daniel Fournier has always been interested in public service. Initially a member of the Liberal Party of Canada, he later joined the Conservative Party, arguing like many other Canadians, that although he is a social liberal he believes that solid economic growth achieved through sound and fiscally conservative policies was the best way to create wealth and offer the best protections and services to the largest number of Canadians.[11]

Before running for office in 2006, Fournier discussed his party's direction and future prospects with several prominent Conservatives across Canada, including Peter Lougheed, John Tory, Preston Manning, Tony Clement, Pat Binns, and Jim Dinning.[12] He was defeated but received close to 15% of the votes in a race involving 11 candidates.[13]

In 2007, Fournier contributed a chapter to Reconquérir le Canada: Un nouveau projet pour la nation québécoise, a book defending Canadian federalism within Quebec.[14]

Electoral record

Canadian federal election, 2006: Outremont
Party Candidate Votes%∆%Expenditures
LiberalJean Lapierre 14,282 35.18 −5.76 $69,816
Bloc QuébécoisJacques Léonard 11,778 29.01 −4.24 $63,590
New DemocraticLéo-Paul Lauzon 6,984 17.20 +3.14 $26,625
ConservativeDaniel Fournier 5,168 12.73 +6.76 $73,991
GreenFrançois Pilon 1,957 4.82 +0.53 $425
     Independent Eric Roach Denis 101 0.25 $431
     Progressive Canadian Philip Paynter 94 0.23 none listed
Marxist–LeninistLinda Sullivan 88 0.22 −0.09 none listed
     Independent Yan Lacombe 85 0.21 none listed
     Independent Xavier Rochon 34 0.08 $572
     Independent Régent Millette 22 0.05 none listed
Total valid votes 40,593100.00
Total rejected ballots 2820.69
Turnout 40,87560.78−4.65
Electors on the lists 67,253

Source: Official Results, Elections Canada and Financial Returns, Elections Canada.

References

  1. Robert Collison, "The Laird of Ogilvy," Globe and Mail, 4 November 1988, p. 72.
  2. Canada Votes 2006: Ridings & Candidates: Outremont, Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, accessed 8 April 2011.
  3. "Fournier group owns 94% of Ritz-Carlton Hotel," Montreal Gazette, 29 November 1988, D1.
  4. "APPOINTMENT NOTICE: SITQ: Caisse de depôt et placement du Quebec," Globe and Mail, 9 July 2008, B5.
  5. Paul Delean, "Caisse turns to France in latest front office shakeup," Montreal Gazette, 24 July 2009, B1; "La Caisse annonce un changement de la garde à son bras immobilier," La Presse Canadienne, 14 June 2010.
  6. http://cdpq.com/en/nouvelles-medias/communiques/communique_110421
  7. http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/careers/careers-leadership/ivanhoe-cambridges-daniel-fournier-a-real-estate-titan-in-search-of-the-next-brazil/article14322007/?page=all
  8. https://www.biv.com/article/2014/12/profile-ivanhoe-cambridge-ceo-daniel-fournier/
  9. http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/ivanhoe-cambridge-to-buy-aimcos-stake-in-montreals-place-ville-marie/article13751663/
  10. http://www.lesaffaires.com/secteurs-d-activite/immobilier/ivanhoe-cambridge-et-manuvie-construiront-une-tour-de-27-etages-a-montreal/572704
  11. Peter Hadekel, "Tory candidate explains himself," Montreal Gazette, 9 December 2005, B1.
  12. Peter Hadekel, "Tory candidate explains himself," Montreal Gazette, 9 December 2005, B1; Graham Fraser, "Tory 'star' faces tough fight in Montreal," Toronto Star, 20 December 2005, A7; Norman Webster, "Return of the Tories has healthy consequences," Montreal Gazette, 14 January 2006, A29.
  13. Official Results, Thirty-Ninth General Election, Elections Canada. He was fifty-one years old during the election. See Lysiane Gagnon, "Guess who's got respect in Quebec?", Globe and Mail, 16 January 2006, A15.
  14. Lysiane Gagnon, "Selling federalism in Quebec," Globe and Mail, 19 November 2007, A19.

External links

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