Norway’s SWF makes first property investment

Norges Bank Investment Management, which manages the Norwegian $2,908 billion kroner ($500 billion) Government Pension Fund Global, has made its first property investment following approval by the Norwegian Government to invest in the asset class in March.

The fund received a mandate in March 2010 to gradually invest as much as 5 per cent of assets in real estate with the allocation coming out of fixed income.

The fund’s asset allocation is 60 per cent equities, 35–40 per cent fixed income and as much as 5 per cent in real estate. All investments must be outside Norway.

This first property investment is a 150-year lease on a 25 per cent stake in The Crown Estate’s Regent Street properties in London. The purchase price is expected to be about 4.2 billion Norwegian kroner ($700 million) which is a fraction of the overall allocation.

The Ministry of Finance dictated that real estate investments be spread over different types of sectors, properties and securities in European countries except Norway. The fund will mainly invest in unlisted real estate, well-developed property markets and traditional property types.

A real estate investment is defined as the right to land and buildings on land, not fundamental infrastructure such as roads, railways, airports and harbours. The fund can also invest in property, equity and interest-bearing instruments issued by listed or non-listed companies, fund structures and other enterprises focused on buying, developing, managing or financing real estate, as well as derivatives that are naturally linked to real estate instruments.

Sponsored Content

The real estate portfolio will be benchmarked against a European property index supplied by Investment Property Databank (IPD), which measures property performance across 15 European countries.

The fund’s benchmark may over time expand to include other countries in the IPD’s global property index, such as Australia, Canada, Japan, Korea, New Zealand, South Africa and the United States.

The fund is also mandated to have 50 per cent of its equity investments in Europe, 35 per cent in the Americas, Africa and the Middle East, as well as 15 per cent in Asia and Oceania. As well as 60 per cent of its fixed income investments in Europe, 35 per cent in the Americas and 5 per cent in Asia and Oceania.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Conservative overweighting hinders world’s largest investor

An overweight allocation to domestic bonds has not helped the world’s largest investor in the June quarter, with a massive $42 billion shaved off the assets of the ¥116,802 billion ($1.37 trillion), Government Pension Investment Fund of Japan (GPIF).mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Deflation: the taboo which needs to be examined

The funds management industry is famous for its navel-gazing. After a crisis, you can just imagine how much of it goes on. But, perhaps, that self-examination may provide more rewards if it starts to actually look at industry taboos rather than accepted practices.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

European pension funds have blinkered view of risk

The liability-hedging portfolio of European pension funds is imprecisely modelled at nearly half of the pension funds as measured in a EDHEC-Risk Institute survey.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Financial health reports essential says Mercer

After the damage of the global financial crisis, funds should be submitting themselves for voluntary financial health checks to diagnose vulnerabilities and pinpoint risks, asset consulting firm Mercer says.  mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Liquidity as an investment style

This paper by Yale School of Management Professors, Roger Ibbotson and Zhiwu Chen, shows that liquidity, as measured by stock turnover or trading volume, is an economically significant and distinct investment style, and introduces and examines the performance of several portfolio strategies.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Dodd-Frank Act will stand or fall on right people

At a Yale-hosted roundtable on the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform Act, professor of economics, Robert Shiller, said the success of the Act, and the agencies created to study aspects of the market, will depend on appointing the right people, who should be willing to take advice from his fellow economists. Click here to read more.mrec4inarticleinline

Previous