Norway’s KLP drops defence groups because of weapon sales to Israel

Norway’s NOK 878 billion ($87 billion) Kommunal Landspensjonskasse (KLP), the fund for local government employees and healthcare workers, has just excluded US industrials group Oshkosh Corporation and Germany’s ThyssenKrupp for selling weapons including armoured personnel carriers, warships and submarines to the Israeli military.

“In June 2024, KLP learned of reports from the UN that several named companies were supplying weapons or equipment to the Israeli Defence Force (IDF) and that these weapons are being used in Gaza. On the basis of this information, KLP performed a thorough assessment of the companies and engaged in dialogue with them,” says Kiran Aziz, head of responsible investments at KLP Kapitalforvaltning, which she joined almost six years ago.

“Our conclusion is that the companies Oshkosh and ThyssenKrupp are contravening our responsible investment guidelines. We have therefore decided to exclude them from our investment universe.”

Although the combined value of the shares is minimal, KLP hopes to send a clear signal on the importance of human rights through divestment.

Last year, the investor sold its stake in Caterpillar due to the risk that the US company may be contributing to human rights abuses and violation of international law in the West Bank, and in 2022 it excluded 18 companies from its passive equity portfolio due to links with Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank.

Still, KLP’s divestment from defence groups comes at a time when many European pension funds are examining their ESG policies to potentially invest more in listed defence companies. Geopolitical uncertainty and continued war in Europe, coupled with pledges from NATO leaders to increase defence spending to 5 per cent of their countries’ economic output by 2035, is fanning life into the sector.

Sponsored Content

KLP’s latest divestments do not reflect the investor’s preparedness to engage when it believes it can effect change. For example, although many investors have exited China, in recent years KLP has stepped up engagement with Chinese mining companies at risk of breaching its key concerns around labour rights and responsible extraction and mineral processing.

ESG is applied across the whole portfolio where strategy is focused on index portfolios offering broad market exposure and low cost, efficient asset management. KLP monitors and cajoles 7000 companies across 50 countries tracking MSCI and Barclays’ equity and bond indices, of which it currently excludes around 650.

“As an owner of 7000 companies globally you have quite a unique opportunity to set expectations and make sure companies have underlying economic activity that is responsible and sustainable,” she said. “We rely on publicly available information, and our expectations are levelled at boards and  management.”

KLP uses data providers to access information and get an indication of the level of risk. She is less focused on  ESG ratings but takes a keen interest in how a company is doing within its sector, using monitoring tools and working with other investors, stakeholders and civil society. She is in dialogue with around 300 companies annually.

The portfolio is divided between equity (35.1 per cent) short term bonds (26.5 per cent) long term bonds  (12.9 per cent) lending (11 per cent) property including Norwegian and international real estate funds (10.8 per cent)  and other financial assets (3.7 per cent)

KLP is the first company in Norway to have had its climate estimates approved according to the SBTi2 ’s new standard for financial institutions.

Aziz is a qualified lawyer who joined KLP with skills honed to argue and build a case following nine years at the International Commission for Jurists, the NGO that defends human rights and the rule of law. She is a board member of the Norwegian Refugee Council and the role takes her to refugee camps to meet people forced to flee which has informed her belief that investors have a responsibility to protect human rights.

She says the legal profession has taught her about the need to stand firm and persist and the need for courage to raise your voice when engagement is difficult.

“Many companies don’t want investors to interfere or tell them what to do, but investment is based on trust and companies should live up to certain standards.”

Leave a Comment

The twin forces rewriting the rules of investing

The twin forces rewriting the rules of investing

Portfolios built for the old world will be severely tested as emerging forces rewrite the rules of investing. The Fiduciary Investors Symposium heard that geopolitical and macroeconomic upheaval, together with the disruption wrought by AI, should force asset owners to rethink the structure and composition of portfolios.

Sort content by

Managers eye Brunel’s private markets push

Brunel Pension Partnership, the £31 billion asset manager for 10 local authority pension funds in the United Kingdom, is in the process of allocating to a new cohort of managers across private equity and debt, infrastructure, and unsecured income.

Asset owners fear rising inflation and falling equity valuations

The 2022 annual CIO Sentiment Survey, a collaboration between Top1000funds.com and CaseyQuirk, finds asset owners most concerned about equity valuations and inflation. After three years of fee rises, asset owners are paying less for investments while CIOs in 2022 are also working with a smaller manager roster.

Beyond traditional portfolio construction: incorporating uncertainty

Incorporating uncertainty into the asset allocation process is a complicated but essential ingredient of building portfolio resilience, something investors are valuing more than ever in an environment where inflation, geopolitical and climate risks dominate. GIC and BlackRock have both developed asset allocation frameworks that incorporate investors’ aversion for uncertainty.

War in Ukraine threatens net zero targets

The UK's BT Pension Scheme's CIO Wyn Francis reflects on the pressure war in Ukraine will put on investors net zero targets.

Performance variation impacts treatment of infrastructure: PGIM

Historical performance and cash flow characteristics differ enormously among infrastructure asset sectors, and even between assets of the same sector, says the vice president of PGIM IAS’ private assets research program. But scarcity of data makes infrastructure performance notoriously hard to study.

SWIB’s priorities in a tougher investment landscape

Edwin Denson, executive director and CIO at State of Wisconsin Investment Board talks to Top1000funds about changes in investment strategy, noting that active management, and the need to take on more risk for the same return are guiding principles.  

Previous