Arab Times

Norway SWF should shift more into equities: cbank

Final decision next year

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OSLO, Dec 1, (RTRS): Norway’s sovereign wealth fund, the world’s largest, should raise the proportion of its investment­s in equities to 75 percent from 60 percent to boost returns, the central bank, which manages the fund, recommende­d on Thursday.

“A higher equity allocation means that the expected return on the fund will increase,” central bank Deputy Governor Egil Matsen said in a speech.

A majority of members on a government-appointed commission last month recommende­d an increase of equities to 70 percent, although the group’s chairman dissented, saying the holding should instead be cut to 50 percent to reduce volatility.

“The realised return ... may differ considerab­ly from expectatio­ns. In order to maintain the investment strategy over time, a good understand­ing and broad acceptance of this risk are essential,” deputy governor Matsen said.

Made up of revenues from Norway’s extensive oil and gas industry, the rainy-day fund began saving cash in 1996 to preserve wealth for future generation­s and protect the country’s economy from short-term swings in the oil market.

The increased equity holding would boost the expected 30-year return of the fund to 3.0 percent per year from the 2.6 percent which was estimated if the equity allocation remained at 60 percent, said the central bank.

On a 10-year basis the expected return would rise to 2.5 percent per year from 2.1 percent, it added.

The recommenda­tion will now be sent to Norway’s Finance Ministry, which is expected to publish a white paper on the fund’s strategy in the spring and to seek the consent of parliament.

If a change was made today, it would mean the world’s largest sovereign wealth fund, currently valued at $862 billion, would move about $129 billion into equities away from government bonds, whose low interest rates drag down the fund’s return.

But any reallocati­on of the fund’s assets is expected to take several years.

Valued at more than twice Norway’s annual gross domestic product, government­s are only allowed to spend an average 4 percent of the fund each year under the so-called fiscal spending rule, and this may be tightened even more.

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