www.zerohedge.com
Readers may recall
in April that Norway's sovereign wealth fund, the world's biggest,
posted record losses for 1Q20 as the virus pandemic wreaked havoc on
global markets.
For more color on the losses, the $1.15 trillion sovereign wealth fund posted a $21.27 billion loss (-3.4%) over the first half of 2020.
Citing "major fluctuations" in equity markets, Deputy CEO of Norges Bank
Investment Management Trond Grande said the year started great but
quickly turned for the worse when the spread of the virus led to market
meltdowns.
"There were major fluctuations in the equity market in this period. The
year started with optimism, but the outlook of the equity market quickly
turned when the Corona virus started to spread globally," said Grande.
Grande said, "however, the sharp stock market decline of the first
quarter was limited by a massive monetary and financial policy
response."
During the half, the fund was 69.6% invested in equities, 27.6% in
fixed income, and 2.8% in real estate. Equity investing was by far the
worst investment during the period, down 6.8%.
A Reuters graphic shows Norway's sovereign wealth fund is the largest in the world.
The fund's portfolio of energy companies were the weakest performers,
with those stocks down by at least a third due to plunging oil prices.
Technology stocks fared the best, soared 14.2% over the period. The
fund's largest holdings were Microsoft, Apple, Amazon, and Alphabet.
Despite a rebound, European stocks returned -11.7% for 1H20 and
accounted for 31.6% of the fund's equity holdings. Asia-Pacific made up
23% of the fund's equity investments, returned -4.6% over the period.
Emerging markets returned -7.3% and accounted for 11.5% of the equity
portfolio.
The Norwegian government has been tapping into the fund, withdrawing
billions of dollars since March to pay for the pandemic-related costs.
"Even though markets recovered well in the second quarter, we are still witnessing considerable uncertainty," Grande said.
With the tech stock rally repeating that of the 1990s Dot-Com bubble.
What could possibly go wrong for the world's largest sovereign wealth
fund with some of its largest holdings in these highly overvalued
stocks?
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