Updated:
Régime de retraite de l’Université du Québec
The Régime de retraite de l’Université du Québec (RRUQ) launched in 1969 to serve employees of the Université du Québec network and a small set of...
Régime de retraite de l’Université du Québec
The Régime de retraite de l’Université du Québec (RRUQ) launched in 1969 to serve employees of the Université du Québec network and a small set of affiliated employers. It operates as a traditional defined-benefit plan: the annuity pays 2% per year of participation based on the participant’s five highest-earning years, integrated at age 65 with the Québec Pension Plan. The plan’s membership is concentrated in Quebec City, where the central administration is based. RRUQ allocates across a deliberately broad strategy set — buyout, growth, venture, distressed debt, mezzanine, secondaries, timber, and balanced mandates all appear in the program. On the private-markets side, the pension leans on well-known external managers and pooled vehicles. Real-estate exposure flows through Ivanhoé Cambridge (via CDPQ), Ardian’s Paris-based fund, BentallGreenOak in Vancouver, and New York’s Blackstone, alongside Toronto managers Brookfield and Conundrum Capital. Infrastructure holdings are also accessed through CDPQ’s global portfolio. This structure gives the plan concentrated Québec and pan-Canadian relationships while layering in European and US exposure. RRUQ’s operational footprint is lean; senior investment advisor Normand Belley is the publicly visible investment professional, and he also serves on the investment committee of INRS (Institut national de la recherche scientifique). The plan’s responsible-investment scaffolding is well-established: it became a UN PRI signatory in November 2009 and holds active membership in Canada’s Responsible Investment Association. Board-level oversight extends into the philanthropic sphere — RRUQ representative Pierre Labelle holds the co-president seat on the audit committee of Fondation Québec Philanthrope, indicating some degree of organizational adjacency to the province’s charitable ecosystem. For a Canadian public-university pension, RRUQ’s structural distinction lies in its delegated implementation model. Unlike Ontario Teachers’ or AIMCo-style direct-investment buildouts, RRUQ runs almost no in-house asset-management factory. Deployment is routed through a curated roster of external general partners and large Canadian institutional platforms, which makes the plan a quiet but steady LP check-writer across multiple vintage years and geographies rather than a direct co-investor or control player.
General information
Firm type
Pension Fund
Year founded
1969
AUM
$4.0B – $4.5B (Altss estimate)
Location
Region
North America
Country
Canada
City
Quebec City
Corporate office
Quebec City, Quebec, Canada
Principals
Normand Belley
Senior Investment Advisor
Pierre Labelle
Co-president of the Audit Committee, Fondation Québec Philanthrope (RRUQ representative)
Sector focus
Frequently asked questions
Who runs investment decisions at the Régime de retraite de l’Université du Québec?
Senior Investment Advisor Normand Belley is the publicly visible investment professional. He additionally sits on the investment committee of INRS. RRUQ does not publish a full investment-team roster, consistent with its lean in-house operating model that delegates most asset management to external firms and institutional platforms.
Does RRUQ invest directly or through external managers?
RRUQ is primarily a fund-of-funds and external-manager allocator. Its known real-estate and infrastructure commitments — Ivanhoé Cambridge, Ardian, BentallGreenOak, Blackstone, Brookfield, and Conundrum Capital — are all third-party-managed vehicles or platforms. The plan does not market itself as a direct co-investor or in-house operator.
What is the plan’s relationship with CDPQ?
RRUQ accesses real estate and infrastructure exposure through the Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec (CDPQ). Two known portfolio sleeves — Ivanhoé Cambridge (real estate) and a global infrastructure portfolio — are routed via CDPQ, a common pattern for smaller Quebec public-sector plans that want the Caisse’s scale without duplicating its direct-investment capabilities.
What is RRUQ’s responsible-investment posture?
RRUQ has been a signatory to the UN Principles for Responsible Investment since November 4, 2009, and maintains active membership in the Responsible Investment Association of Canada. These affiliations signal a long-standing commitment to ESG integration, though the plan does not publish standalone impact or stewardship reports publicly.
How is the pension funded, and who belongs to it?
The plan covers employees of the Université du Québec’s constituent institutions plus a handful of linked employers. It is a defined-benefit arrangement: the lifetime annuity equals 2% per year of service applied to the member’s five highest-earning years, and the benefit is coordinated with the Québec Pension Plan at age 65.
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.
Need institutional-grade insight on pension funds?
Altss delivers:
Prefer a guided tour?
We’ll walk you through: