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Canada Pension Plan Investment Board
OrganisationCA

Canada Pension Plan Investment Board

Canadian pension fund; C$600bn+ AUM; invested $840m in CtrlS Datacenters in June 2026.

Last refreshed: 28 June 2026 · Appears in 2 active topics

Key Question

Why is a Canadian pension fund backing a London debt data startup?

Timeline for Canada Pension Plan Investment Board

#825 Jun

Acquired approximately $840m stake in CtrlS Datacenters on 17 June

Data Centres: Boom and Backlash: Amazon lifts India bet to $48bn
#88 Jun

Invested as new investor in PhysicsX Series C

UK Startups and Innovation: PhysicsX hits $2.4bn on Temasek cash
#329 Apr
View full timeline →
Common Questions
What does Canada Pension Plan Investment Board invest in?
CPPIB invests across public equities, private equity, infrastructure, real estate, credit, and increasingly venture capital, with a long-horizon mandate measured in decades.Source: uk-startups-and-innovation
Why is CPPIB investing in UK tech startups?
CPPIB is diversifying into high-growth private companies globally. Its investment in 9fin reflects a thesis that financial data infrastructure businesses offer durable long-term returns.Source: uk-startups-and-innovation
Why did Canada's pension fund invest $840m in an Indian data centre company?
CPPIB took an approximately $840 million equity stake in CtrlS Datacenters, India's largest Tier IV-rated colocation operator, on 17 June 2026, as part of its strategy of increasing long-horizon allocations to digital infrastructure in high-growth markets.Source: Lowdown

Background

Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB) took an approximately $840 million stake in CtrlS Datacenters on 17 June 2026, establishing the Canadian pension fund as one of the largest institutional investors in India's data-centre sector. CtrlS, India's largest Tier IV-rated colocation operator, is expanding hyperscale-ready capacity across Mumbai and Hyderabad to meet accelerating AI infrastructure demand.

CPPIB is one of the world's largest institutional investors, managing more than c$600 billion in assets on behalf of approximately 21 million Canadians. Founded in 1997 and headquartered in Toronto, it invests across public equities, private equity, infrastructure, real estate, and credit with an investment horizon measured in decades. Its strategy progressively increases allocations to private markets, infrastructure, and growth-stage technology across mature and emerging economies alike.

The CtrlS deal follows CPPIB's participation in the $170 million Series c round for 9fin, the London-based AI-powered debt intelligence platform that reached unicorn status in March 2026. The two investments together reflect CPPIB's dual bet on the data economy: hard physical infrastructure in the Global South and software-driven data platforms in established markets.

More questions
How large is the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board?
CPPIB manages more than c$600 billion in assets on behalf of approximately 21 million Canadians, making it one of the ten largest pension funds in the world by assets under management.Source: CPPIB
What is CPPIB's investment strategy and what markets does it focus on?
CPPIB invests across public equities, private equity, infrastructure, real estate, and credit on a multi-decade investment horizon, with a strategy of progressively increasing allocations to private markets and digital infrastructure across both mature and emerging economies.Source: CPPIB
Which UK tech companies has the Canada Pension Plan invested in?
CPPIB participated in the $170 million Series c round for 9fin, the London-based AI-powered debt intelligence platform, which crossed unicorn status in March 2026 with a round led by HarbourVest.Source: Lowdown
What is CtrlS Datacenters and why did CPPIB choose to invest in it?
CtrlS Datacenters is India's largest Tier IV-rated colocation operator, with hyperscale-ready campuses in Mumbai and Hyderabad. CPPIB invested approximately $840 million in June 2026 to gain long-horizon exposure to India's rapidly expanding AI infrastructure market, where Google, Amazon, and Microsoft are all building capacity.Source: Lowdown