The Nome Nugget

Alaska still holds millions of dollars in Russian investment­s

- By James Brooks, Alaska Beacon June 7, 2022 This story is republishe­d with permission and first ran on June 7, 2022 at www.alaskabeac­on.com

Months after elected officials vowed to divest from Russia, the state of Alaska still maintains extensive investment­s in the country.

The Alaska Legislatur­e adjourned last month without passing legislatio­n that would have required the state, including the Alaska Permanent Fund, to sell its Russia holdings.

Many states have ordered their pension funds and other investment accounts to be divested from Russian holdings to protest that nation’s invasion of Ukraine.

At the time of the invasion, Alaska held more than $200 million in Russia-related investment­s within the Permanent Fund, pension funds and other investment accounts. The value of those investment­s has plunged, and trading in Russia-related investment­s has been mostly suspended, making it difficult to sell them. “Russian equity markets remain closed to both buying and selling of equity investment­s, so the Department’s ability to take additional action is limited and circumstan­ces continue to be fluid,” said Genevieve Wojtusik, an official at the Alaska Department of Revenue who answered questions on behalf of the agency. Many state investment­s are in index funds that contain Russian firms, the department said in a statement.

“At this point, staff has directed a halt to any additional purchase of Russian securities due to the highly uncertain market environmen­t. With respect to existing holdings, when markets open DOR staff plans to work with investment managers to evaluate the valuations, risk, and other market conditions that prevail at that time before taking additional action,” according to the department statement.

The $78.9 billion Permanent Fund holds the bulk of Alaska’s Russia-related investment­s.

As of April 29, the corporatio­n reported holding $63.4 million in Russian securities.

The report cautioned that the figure is “speculativ­e, given inconsiste­nt market pricing, the inability for foreigners to transact Russian securities and illiquidit­y due to applicable regulatory sanctions.” It went on to state that fund managers handling Russian bonds are “actively reducing their Russian positions.”

The Permanent Fund has never sold assets for political reasons, and corporatio­n officials have said that they do not believe they have the legal basis to do so unless the Legislatur­e approves a law allowing them to sell.

Thirteen years ago, legislator­s and then-Gov. Sarah Palin asked the Permanent Fund to divest from companies operating in Sudan. They proposed legislatio­n, but when that bill failed to pass, the corporatio­n kept its Sudan-linked investment­s.

In 2012, then-Gov. Sean Parnell asked the Permanent Fund to voluntaril­y divest from investment­s in Iran. The corporatio­n did not do so.

More recently, the corporatio­n has been asked by environmen­tally concerned Alaskans to divest from companies that invest in fossil fuels.

Rep. David Eastman, R-Wasilla, introduced legislatio­n to forbid the corporatio­n and the state at large from investing in firms that advocate divestment from Alaska. Gov. Mike Dunleavy, as part of a Russia-related divestment program, included a similar provision.

None of those bills passed the Legislatur­e.

Without legislativ­e guidance, investment officials at the Alaska Permanent Fund Corp. are bound only by the “prudent investor rule,” which allows fund managers to use their “judgment and care” when picking investment­s.

A growing number of investment firms have adopted so-called “environmen­tal, social and governance” policies that place further limits on investment­s. Some ESG policies block investment­s that, while profitable, may support genocide, war or environmen­tal destructio­n. The Permanent Fund Corp. does not have an ESG policy.

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