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Norway wealth fund posts record $164 billion loss

By:
Reuters
Updated: Jan 31, 2023, 12:06 UTC

OSLO (Reuters) - Norway's $1.3 trillion wealth fund, one of the world's largest investors, on Tuesday reported a record loss of 1.64 trillion crowns ($164.4 billion) for 2022.

A general view of the Norwegian central bank, where Norway's sovereign wealth fund is situated, in Oslo

By Victoria Klesty

OSLO (Reuters) – Norway’s wealth fund, one of the world’s largest investors, posted a record loss of 1.64 trillion crowns ($164.4 billion) for 2022, bringing to an end a three-year run of soaring profits as stocks and bonds were hit by the Ukraine war and inflation.

The previous largest loss was 633 billion crowns in 2008.

It ends a record-breaking streak for the fund, where annual returns exceeded one trillion crowns in each of the three years from 2019 to 2021, amounting to more than four trillion crowns combined.

“We are invested in 9,000 companies in 70 countries. There is just nowhere to hide,” fund Chief Executive Nicolai Tangen told a news conference.

The single biggest stock market loss came from the fund’s stake in Amazon, which declined in value by 56 billion crowns, followed by a loss in shares of Facebook owner Meta Platforms of 52 billion and in Tesla with 47 billion.

Still, despite the record loss, the value of the fund rose overall by 89 billion crowns or $8.9 billion year-on-year, partly due to the weak Norwegian currency and a record 1.1 trillion crowns of cash inflows.

The inflows in 2022 were nearly three times the previous record, of 386 billion crowns, set in 2008.

The fund invests the Norwegian state’s revenues from petroleum production. As a major crude exporter and Europe’s largest gas supplier after a drop in Russian gas flows, Norway benefited from high energy prices due to the war in Ukraine.

Graphic: Market value of Norway’s wealth fund- https://www.reuters.com/graphics/NORWAY-SWF/RENEWABLES/zgvobrgwxpd/chart.png

“We have to be very conscious of the fact that the inflow came against a tragic backdrop in Europe,” Tangen said.

“But it is an isolated mathematical fact that when oil and gas prices are higher, there is more revenue to the (Norwegian) government and more inflow into the fund.”

The fund owns on average 1.3% of all listed stocks. It also invests in bonds, unlisted real estate and renewable energy projects.

Looking ahead, Tangen said inflation would continue to be a worry.

“Inflation remains a risk factor and, in particular, tied into what will happen when China really kicks in on the consumption side because it could drive a lot of prices globally,” Tangen told Reuters.

“And then of course we have still geopolitical hotspots.”

The fund’s return on investment in 2022 stood at minus 14.1% for the year, which was 0.88 percentage point better than the return on the fund’s benchmark index.

($1 = 9.9752 Norwegian crowns)

(Reporting by Victoria Klesty in Oslo; editing by Gwladys Fouche, Terje Solsvik and Emelia Sithole-Matarise)

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