August 2020

World’s largest sovereign wealth fund reports $21 billion loss after ‘volatile’ first half of the year

Norway’s huge pension fund — the largest sovereign wealth fund in the world — reported negative returns for the first half of the year on Tuesday, citing “major fluctuations” in equity markets. Read also Canada Pension Plan Returns 5.6% in First Quarter The Government Pension Fund Global said it returned -3.4% for the first six months of 2020, equivalent to -188 billion kroner (-$21.3 billion). Read also MetLife Board Dodges Lawsuit Over $500 Million Annuity Error “There were major fluctuations in...

July 2020

Norwegian Government Pension Fund: exclude nuclear weapons producers from investments

The ethical committee of the Norwegian Government Pension Fund recommended this week to include significant policy improvements on issues that PAX has advocated for, including nuclear weapons, lethal autonomous weapons and controversial arms trade. In brief, it builds the norm against weapons causing indiscriminate harm and against the controversial arms trade. Read also Banks and pension funds among investors bankrolling meat and dairy The Norwegian Government Pension Fund Global invests oil revenues on behalf of all Norwegians and is the...

June 2020

Norway’s Ageing Population Problem

Right now, the biggest problem faced by Norway is the necessary transition away from the oil and gas industry. The country's economy has been fuelled by the deposits under the Norwegian continental shelf for decades. With reservoirs running dry, the economy needs to diversify. But with investment in modern technologies such as electric battery and charging infrastructure, offshore wind, and autonomous shipping, Norway's government does at least have a plan. The same can't be said, yet, for the problem...

March 2020

Norway’s Pension Giant Calls for Improved ESG Metrics

Norway’s $1.07 trillion Government Pension Fund Global, which owns stakes in more than 9,200 companies and owns 1.5% of all listed stocks, is pressing the companies it invests in to provide more tangible data regarding environmental, social, and governance (ESG) issues. The fund said it’s no longer enough to hear promises of responsible investing, and that it’s time for companies to start providing hard data to show they’re being true to their word. “In recent years, we have...

November 2019

Income of 100 richest Norwegians almost double in last 10 years: report

While the income of 100 richest people in Norway almost doubled in last ten years, most other people have seen much smaller growth of their earnings, newspaper Aftenposten reported Wednesday. The tax and income list for 2018 published on Tuesday showed that more Norwegians have a taxable income of more than 1 million kroner (109,529 U.S. dollars) per year. These figures do not include deductions before tax. Last year, a total of 152,537 people earned over 1 million, 13,246...

October 2019

Norway’s largest pension fund KLP exits oil sands companies

KLP, Norway’s largest pension fund, will no longer invest in companies deriving their income from oil sands, and recently sold stocks and bonds in such firms worth about $58 million, it said on Monday. Oil sands have been a focal point of environmental groups’ global efforts to stifle energy production from fossil fuels, saying they take an especially large toll on the environment. KLP’s decision affects five companies, which were added to its exclusion list: Canada’s Cenovus Energy, Suncor...

May 2019

Norway’s pension fund KLP bans investment in alcohol, gambling firms

KLP, Norway’s largest pension fund, said on Tuesday it will no longer invest in gambling companies and alcohol makers, and recently sold stocks and bonds in such firms worth about $320 million. The decision affects around 90 companies, which have been added to KLP’s exclusion list alongside industries it previously divested from, including tobacco firms, certain weapons makers and those involved in the mining or usage of coal. Explaining its decision, KLP said it did not want to make...

Pension fund giant KLP cuts coal related investment

BHP Group is among several companies a $106 billion international pension fund has excluded from its investment universe as it aims to rid its portfolio of coal. Norway's Kommunal Landspensjonskasse (KLP) took the decision to divest almost $520,000 of holdings in stocks and bonds of across 46 such companies. It used three exclusion criteria: companies that get more than 5% revenue from coal-based activities; produce more than 20 million tons of coal annually; and have more than 10,000 megawatts...

UN partners with KLP to Identify Financial Investments At Risk

The United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction and KLP, Norway's largest pension company, announced today a partnership to geo-tag financial investments against vulnerability to disaster and climate risk. The UN Secretary-General’s Special Representative for Disaster Risk Reduction, Mami Mizutori, said: “This is a major breakthrough in the world of finance and investment. It is clear recognition of the need to include disaster risk in the investment portfolios of any self-respecting enterprise seeking to avoid exposure to climate and...

March 2019

Dutch fund commits to member preferences

One courageous pension fund is letting its members put their money where their mouth is. The Pensioenfonds Detailhandel has surveyed its members about their sustainability preferences and is actually making investment decisions based on the results of the survey. In June 2018, active members of the €23 billion fund for retail workers in the Netherlands were invited to participate in an online survey run by academics at Maastricht University. Respondents were asked to decide on the sustainable investment strategy...