Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

World’s biggest wealth fund now close to dumping assets

- Bloomberg feedback@livemint.com

OSLO: Norway’s $950 billion sovereign wealth fund—the world’s biggest—is about to make history as it prepares to liquidate assets to cover government withdrawal­s.

The crisis triggered by the coronaviru­s pandemic is playing out very differentl­y for the giant investor than the 2008 great recession. Back then, Norway’s wealth fund used the global selloff to buy up cheap stocks. This time, the fund will probably need to offload a sizable chunk of its bond portfolio.

Norway faces its worst economic shock in half a century. With petroleum revenue sharply down, the government has much less income to use on crisis measures. That means it will need to withdraw historic sums from its wealth fund to make ends meet.

While past withdrawal­s were easily covered by the fund’s cash flow, that’s no longer the case. Companies it invests in are now suspending dividends en masse, in response to the crisis.

Chief executive officer Yngve Slyngstad has already said cash flow this year will be “significan­tly lower” than previously expected. In 2019, the fund got 243 billion kroner ($23 billion). Meanwhile, calculatio­ns by Bloomberg News show that Norway’s government will need to pull at least 266 billion kroner from the fund this year (assuming oil prices stay at current levels through 2020).

The situation is quickly deteriorat­ing, and the numbers remain subject to change. A week ago, it looked like government withdrawal­s would reach just 150 billion kroner, or about $14 billion.

The government’s latest estimates cover a scenario in which the economic crisis triggered by the pandemic lasts two months. I f t he f allout continues f or another two months after that, the 2020 budget would take a further hit of more than 110 billion kroner, Finance minister Jan Tore Sanner said in a letter to Parliament on Monday. That would force the fund to resort to even deeper asset sales.

Meanwhile, a rule requiring the fund to rebalance its portfolio is likely to be triggered on

Tuesday, after the equity portfolio fell about 5 percentage points below a 70% target last week. That means withdrawal­s would need to be covered by bond sales, Slyngstad said.

The contrast to 2008-2009 is striking. In the first quarter of 2009, the fund bought 136 billion kroner’s worth of cheap stocks, laying part of the foundation for its spectacula­r ascent during the decade-long rally that followed. What’s more, Norway’s petroleum income peaked in 2008, and the government deposited surplus cash into the fund.

Slyngstad, who is due to step down this year after running Norway’s wealth fund for 12 years, has described the period right after the 2008 financial crisis as the “hardest— but also in retrospect best” of his tenure.

 ??  ?? Yngve Slyngstad, CEO of Norges Bank Investment Management has said that cash flow this year would be significan­tly lower. BLOOMBERG
Yngve Slyngstad, CEO of Norges Bank Investment Management has said that cash flow this year would be significan­tly lower. BLOOMBERG

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