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Caisse Nationale des Barreaux Français (CNBF)
The Caisse Nationale des Barreaux Français was established as the mandatory pension vehicle for the French legal profession, consolidating retirement...
Caisse Nationale des Barreaux Français (CNBF)
The Caisse Nationale des Barreaux Français was established as the mandatory pension vehicle for the French legal profession, consolidating retirement obligations that had previously been managed at a regional level. Every lawyer admitted to a French bar is required to participate—a statutory remit that gives CNBF a captive, profession-wide contribution base. The fund is governed by a board of directors drawn from the Conseil National des Barreaux, the representative body for France's 70,000-plus avocats. Christophe Pettiti held the presidency from 2020 to 2022 before Xavier Chiloux assumed the role. CNBF's investment strategy is structurally conservative, reflecting the sovereign-liability posture of its defined-benefit commitments. The portfolio rests on two primary pillars: a large direct real estate allocation concentrated in central Paris, and a financial reserves portfolio composed overwhelmingly of sovereign and investment-grade corporate bonds. On the real estate side, the institution owns between 10 and 12 buildings in Paris, including its mixed-use headquarters at 11 boulevard de Sébastopol in the 1st arrondissement. The fund acquires properties outright—eschewing fund structures—and generates predictable yield through long-term commercial leases. The financial reserves portfolio adds liquidity and income duration, calibrated to match the cash-flow profile of retiree obligations. CNBF became a signatory to the United Nations Principles for Responsible Investment, integrating ESG screens into its manager selection and direct-investment processes (per the firm's official communications). Tristan des Garets leads the real estate division, overseeing asset management, leasing strategy, and acquisitions across the Paris portfolio. While full team headcount is not publicly disclosed, the fund operates from a single office in Paris, with no international satellite locations. Earlier this decade, CNBF participated in GIP-MDS, the public-interest consortium that modernized France's social-declaration infrastructure—an operational detail consistent with its institutional preference for stable, state-adjacent partnerships. No dedicated venture, private equity, or hedge-fund vehicles have been publicly announced; the fund's risk appetite tilts heavily toward capital preservation over alpha generation. What distinguishes CNBF structurally is the compulsory, profession-wide nature of its mandate. Unlike discretionary corporate pension plans or voluntary multi-employer schemes, every single French lawyer must contribute—creating a permanently captive flow of premiums that insulates the fund from competitive attrition. This architecture mirrors certain public-sector pension systems in scale obligation, yet remains governed by representatives of a self-regulated liberal profession rather than by employer-union parity. The resulting posture is a pension fund that behaves, in its real-estate operations, more like an institutional family office deeply concentrated in one city's commercial property market than a diversified global allocator.
General information
Firm type
Pension Fund
Location
Region
Europe
Country
France
City
Paris
Corporate office
11 boulevard de Sébastopol, 75038 Paris, France
Principals
Xavier Chiloux
President of the Board of Directors
Tristan des Garets
Head of Real Estate
Sector focus
Frequently asked questions
Who runs investment decisions at CNBF?
The Board of Directors, comprised of elected representatives of the French legal profession, sets the overarching investment policy. Xavier Chiloux currently serves as President of the Board, providing strategic direction. For real estate, operational portfolio management is led by Head of Real Estate Tristan des Garets, who oversees the CNBF's directly owned Parisian properties.
Is CNBF a public or private pension fund?
CNBF is a public-interest, mandatory pension fund operating under French social-security law. It is not a private sector vehicle. It administers the compulsory retirement scheme for French avocats and their staff, making it more akin to a sovereign-linked asset owner with a social-protection mandate than a conventional institutional investor.
How does CNBF allocate between retirement reserves and real estate?
The fund splits its assets between mobilized financial reserves and a directly owned real estate portfolio. The property component is concentrated in Paris, with an estimated 10 to 12 mixed-use buildings. While the fund does not publicly disclose the exact split, the directly held real estate represents a structurally significant portion of total assets, an unusual degree of physical-asset concentration for a European pension fund of its size.
What is CNBF's relationship to the Conseil National des Barreaux?
The Conseil National des Barreaux serves as the CNBF's strategic partner and supervisory authority, representing the interests of all French bar associations. The CNBF operates under the CNB's legal framework, and the CNBF board is composed of avocats elected through the profession's governance mechanisms, ensuring the fund's management remains closely tied to the legal community it serves.
Does CNBF integrate ESG criteria into its investments?
Yes. CNBF is a signatory to the UN Principles for Responsible Investment (PRI) and has committed to integrating ESG factors across its investment strategy. This includes evaluating sustainability and governance criteria in both its financial reserves allocation and its direct real estate portfolio management.
Can external investors co-invest alongside CNBF?
No. CNBF is a closed, mandatory pension fund serving the French legal profession. It does not open its capital to external limited partners, nor does it operate club-deal or co-investment structures. Its assets are exclusively deployed for the benefit of contributing avocats and their beneficiaries.
Where are CNBF's real estate assets located?
CNBF's real estate portfolio is concentrated in Paris, France. Its flagship property is the mixed-use headquarters located at 11 boulevard de Sébastopol in the 1st arrondissement, with additional buildings spread across the city, giving the fund substantial exposure to Parisian commercial and mixed-use property markets.
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