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Research Shows Profit, Not Politics, Drives Sovereign Wealth Fund

Investment funds owned by national governments – known as “sovereign wealth funds” – now wield trillions of dollars in investment power globally, raising concerns that the funds could be used for political purposes and leading to calls for limits on where these funds can invest. But new research from North Carolina State University indicates that such concerns may not be warranted, and that one of the largest sovereign wealth funds has been driven by profit, rather than political considerations.

“Many people have raised concerns about politically-driven investment decisions by sovereign wealth funds, and have urged that these funds be barred from investing in the United States,” says Thomas Grennes, a professor of economics at NC State and co-author of the new research. “So we evaluated the Norway Fund to see whether such concerns were borne out.” The Norway Fund is internationally recognized as the most transparent sovereign wealth fund, and has the most publicly available data. It is also one of the largest investors in European stock, with total assets of approximately $500 billion.

“We found that the Norway Fund operates like a profit-driven mutual fund, rather than making politically driven investments,” says Dr. Mehmet Caner, professor of economics at NC State and co-author of the paper.

“So,” Grennes adds, “if this is representative of other sovereign wealth funds, it shows that profit motive outweighs political considerations. Therefore, these funds do not pose a greater risk to markets than traditional, private investors.”

However, other sovereign wealth funds are far more secretive, making it impossible to assess their investments. For example, some Middle Eastern funds provide so little information that it is not even entirely clear who owns them.

But Grennes and Caner are hopeful that additional information will soon be available on other funds, as a result of a recent agreement between the International Monetary Fund and all of the major sovereign wealth funds to become more transparent. “As other funds make data available, we hope to determine whether these funds are similarly profit-driven,” Caner says.

The Norway Fund research, “Sovereign Wealth Funds: the Norwegian Experience,” was published online Jan. 22 by the journal The World Economy.

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Note to editors: The study abstract follows.

“Sovereign Wealth Funds: the Norwegian Experience”

Authors: Thomas Grennes, Mehmet Caner, North Carolina State University

Published: online Jan. 22, 2010, The World Economy

Abstract: Sovereign wealth funds have rapidly become significant international institutions. The performance of funds varies substantially across countries and over time, but comprehensive and systematic analyses of funds have been hampered by the lack of transparency of most funds. The relative transparency of the Norway Fund allows us to do an econometric analysis of the Fund’s performance. The record resembles that of a mutual fund that has taken on greater risk over time. There is no evidence that the Fund has disrupted foreign financial markets more than mutual funds do. There remains a question as to whether the Fund and its Finance Ministry have been effective agents for the Norwegian citizens whose assets they are managing.