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Procter & Gamble Pension Fund
Alison Smith chairs the trustee board of the P&G Pension Fund, a roughly $12B single-employer plan deploying into infrastructure and private equity...
Procter & Gamble Pension Fund
The Procter & Gamble Pension Fund was established in 1982 as the primary retirement vehicle for certain employees of the Cincinnati-based consumer products manufacturer and its wholly-owned subsidiaries. Alison Smith serves as Chair of the Trustee Board, which governs the plan. The fund operates as a classic single-employer defined benefit plan, with liabilities ultimately backed by the sponsoring employer, P&G. The fund allocates across a mix of asset classes, with known commitments to private markets including infrastructure and private equity. Portfolio holdings include a position in BlackRock Global Infrastructure Fund IV and a separate private equity arrangement managed by BlackRock Alternatives Management. The plan's geographic exposure is global, consistent with the footprint of its multinational sponsor. The plan provides death and disability benefits in addition to retirement income. Altss research estimates the fund's assets at approximately $12B, placing it among the larger corporate pension plans in the United States. The plan is linked to related corporate entities including a UK pension vehicle sponsored by Procter & Gamble Limited, where The Gillette Company LLC provides a guarantee for liabilities. The Procter & Gamble Fund serves as the corporate philanthropic arm, separate from the pension plan. The fund's structural differentiator is its close integration with the corporate treasury of one of the world's largest consumer packaged goods companies. This relationship provides the plan with a long-duration liability profile that can support illiquid private market commitments — a posture distinct from many corporate pensions that have derisked into fixed income.
General information
Firm type
Pension Fund
Year founded
1982
AUM
$12B (Altss estimate)
Location
Region
North America
Country
United States
City
Cincinnati
Corporate office
Cincinnati, Ohio, United States
Principals
Alison Smith
Chair of the Trustee Board
Sector focus
Frequently asked questions
Who runs investment decisions at the Procter & Gamble Pension Fund?
Alison Smith chairs the Trustee Board, which holds fiduciary responsibility for the plan's governance and investment direction. The board structure reflects a typical single-employer defined benefit plan framework, with trustees overseeing asset allocation, manager selection, and liability management. Day-to-day investment operations may be executed internally at P&G's treasury or delegated to external managers.
How does the P&G Pension Fund source its investment opportunities?
Known commitments suggest the fund accesses private markets primarily through large institutional fund managers like BlackRock, rather than sourcing direct deals independently. The plan's position in vehicles like BlackRock Global Infrastructure Fund IV indicates a fund commitment strategy for alternative assets. Its relationship to P&G's corporate treasury may also provide informal sourcing channels.
Does the P&G Pension Fund commit to external funds or invest directly?
The plan's disclosed portfolio includes commitments to commingled institutional funds managed by BlackRock in both infrastructure and private equity, indicating a fund-of-funds approach rather than a direct investment program. There is no public evidence of direct co-investments or separate managed accounts.
What is the relationship between the P&G Pension Fund and The Gillette Company LLC?
The Gillette Company LLC acts as a guarantor for certain liabilities owed to the P&G Pension Fund's UK arm by employing companies in the United Kingdom. This structure, documented in firm records, reflects the post-acquisition integration of Gillette into P&G's benefits architecture following P&G's acquisition of Gillette in 2005.
Is the P&G Pension Fund's AUM publicly disclosed?
The fund does not publicly report its assets under management as a distinct figure. Altss research estimates the plan's size at approximately $12B based on regulatory filings and plan-level disclosures. The plan's true economic scale may differ materially from this estimate.
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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