The Borneo Post

Singapore wealth fund warns of tough investment decade

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SINGAPORE: Singapore multibilli­ondollar sovereign wealth fund GIC on Thursday reported a substantia­l dip in returns and warned of “difficult” global investment conditions over the next decade.

GIC said in a statement its annualised rate of return, excluding global inflation, for the past 20 years fell to 4.0 per cent in the year to March 2016, from 4.9 per cent in 2015, adding future returns will be challenged by uncertaint­ies caused by the low-yield environmen­t.

“These difficult investment conditions can stretch for the next 10 years,” said Lim Chow Kiat, deputy group president and chief investment officer.

“GIC is prepared for this protracted period of all-time low interest rates, modest global growth prospects and high valuations of financial assets,” he added.

In the face of a global slowdown, most central banks around the world – with the notable exception of the US Federal Reserve – have cut or are considerin­g cutting borrowing costs as they look to ramp up inflation and kickstart their economies.

GIC, formerly known as the Government of Singapore Investment Corporatio­n, manages Singapore’s foreign reserves with a focus on long-term performanc­e.

It does not disclose the exact value of its portfolio, saying only that it has “well over US$ 100 billion of assets” in more than 40 countries, including real estate, equities and fixed-income investment­s.

The US- based Sovereign Wealth Fund Institute says GIC has US$ 344 billion of assets under management, making it the world’s eighth largest.

GIC says 34 per cent of its portfolio is in the United States, 20 per cent in Asia outside Japan and 11 per cent in Japan.

Singapore’s other global investment company, Temasek Holdings, this month said its global portfolio suffered its first annual drop since 2009 at the height of the global financial crisis.

Temasek announced that the value of its global assets was Sg$ 242 billion ( US$ 180 billion) by March, down nine per cent from last year’s record Sg$ 266 billion. — AFP

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