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Caisse de Pension de la Société Suisse de Pharmacie
Founded in 1959 by pharmaSuisse, the Swiss Society of Pharmacists, Caisse de Pension de la Société Suisse de Pharmacie (CPSSPH) began as a modest scheme for a...
Caisse de Pension de la Société Suisse de Pharmacie
Founded in 1959 by pharmaSuisse, the Swiss Society of Pharmacists, Caisse de Pension de la Société Suisse de Pharmacie (CPSSPH) began as a modest scheme for a single profession and expanded meaningfully in 1985 when Switzerland's second pillar became mandatory for employees. The fund serves pharmacies, individual pharmacists, cantonal pharmacy societies, and health-sector employers tied to the pharmaceutical branch, all governed by a parity-based foundation board that seats four employer and four employee representatives. CPSSPH deploys capital across a deliberately diversified set of asset classes. Its real estate exposure includes direct ownership of the office building at Rue Pedro-Meylan 7 in Geneva and participation in the Prisma Global Residential Real Estate vehicle. The fund commits to private markets through buyout funds, general venture funds, and fund-of-funds strategies, and it holds a dedicated Insurance Linked Strategies allocation. A domestic private credit program operates via FWI Prêts aux PME CHF, a lending vehicle for Swiss small and medium enterprises. The fund's investment architecture relies heavily on two co-investment platforms: Prisma Fondation, a professional investment foundation where Philipp Aegerter serves as President, and Fondation Winterthur, where Aegerter chairs the Investment Controlling Committee. CPSSPH's investment governance is anchored by Philipp Aegerter, the named operative who presides over the two foundations that handle the fund's co-investment and lending activities. The fund is a member of ASIP, the Swiss pension fund association, and maintains administrative links to OFAC, the billing office for Swiss pharmacists, which shares its Geneva headquarters. In September 2023, the fund updated its data protection declarations to comply with Switzerland's new Federal Act on Data Protection (LPD), reflecting the operational adjustments typical of Swiss pension institutions managing regulated member data. CPSSPH's structural differentiator lies in its foundation-based co-investment model. Rather than managing assets entirely in-house or delegating to a single external manager, the fund acts as a member-investor in Prisma Fondation, a dedicated investment foundation that pools capital from multiple pension funds to access real estate and private market strategies. This structure gives CPSSPH the scale and diversification benefits of a pooled vehicle while preserving the governance role through Aegerter's presidency, creating a hybrid that sits between a pure direct investor and a passive limited partner.
General information
Firm type
Pension Fund
Year founded
1959
Location
Region
Europe
Country
Switzerland
City
Geneva
Corporate office
7 Rue Pedro-Meylan, 1208 Geneva, Switzerland
Principals
Philipp Aegerter
President, Investment Controlling Committee, Fondation Winterthur; President, Prisma Fondation
Sector focus
Frequently asked questions
Who runs investment decisions at CPSSPH?
Investment governance is executed through the foundation board, composed equally of employer and employee representatives. Philipp Aegerter is the only publicly named figure with investment-committee roles — he serves as President of Prisma Fondation and chairs the Investment Controlling Committee at Fondation Winterthur, both of which are core co-investment vehicles for CPSSPH. A dedicated internal CIO has not been identified in public materials.
How does CPSSPH access private markets?
CPSSPH relies on Swiss investment foundations — principally Prisma Fondation and Fondation Winterthur — to access buyout, venture, real estate, and private-credit strategies. This shared-vehicle model bypasses the need for a large internal direct-investing team. Prisma Global Residential Real Estate and FWI Prêts aux PME CHF are two named programs through which the fund deploys capital.
Is CPSSPH open to external employers or individuals?
No. Membership is restricted under Article 3 of its regulations to Swiss pharmacies, pharmacists practicing in Switzerland, cantonal pharmacy societies, pharmaSuisse, and companies with a pharmaceutical-sector link whose shareholders or partners include a pharmacist. The fund may also extend coverage to employers in broader health-sector professional associations.
What is CPSSPH’s relationship with pharmaSuisse?
CPSSPH was founded by pharmaSuisse — the Swiss Society of Pharmacists — in 1959 and remains the industry’s dedicated pension vehicle. pharmaSuisse itself is eligible for plan membership, and the fund’s governance structure reflects the professional community it serves.
Does CPSSPH invest in hedge funds or liquid alternatives?
Publicly known allocations include private equity, real estate, insurance-linked strategies, and direct SME lending in Switzerland. Insurance-linked strategies appear in the fund’s investment program, but no dedicated hedge fund or liquid-alternatives mandate has been disclosed in available materials.
Which sectors does CPSSPH explicitly avoid?
No explicit exclusion list is published. As a Swiss industry-based pension plan, its avoidance patterns are likely shaped by the investment policies of the foundation vehicles it uses — Prisma and FWI — rather than by a standalone CPSSPH responsible-investment policy.
What is CPSSPH’s known posture on co-investments alongside external GPs?
CPSSPH co-invests through pooled Swiss foundation structures rather than by writing direct tickets alongside third-party GPs. Its membership in Prisma Fondation and Fondation Winterthur embeds it within shared portfolios managed at the foundation level, not through a discretionary co-investment program run by CPSSPH itself.
Profile maintained by Altss using OSINT (open-source intelligence), regulatory filings, licensed data partners, and verified direct submissions. Read the methodology. Last updated: . Continuous refresh with full update cycles at least every 30 days.
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