Norwegian-French property liaison

The Norwegian Government Pension Fund Global and AXA Real Estate will form a real estate joint venture, with the sovereign wealth fund committing €702.5 million ($1.01 billion) for a 50 per cent investment in seven Parisian properties.The $577 billion fund has only been able to invest in real estate since March last year, when it was granted a mandate to invest up to 5 per cent of assets in real estate through a corresponding decrease in fixed-income investments.

In the first instance the Norwegian Ministry of Finance dictated that real estate investments be spread over different types of sectors, properties and securities in European countries except Norway. It may expand into other geographical areas in the future.

The fund made its first foray into real estate last November, investing in a 150-year lease on a 25 per cent stake in The Crown Estate’s Regent Street properties in London. The purchase price was about $780 million which is a fraction of the overall allocation.

The Parisian investment is in properties that constitute about 156,000 square metres of primarily office space in the western and central business districts of the city.

Norges Bank Investment Management (NBIM), the investment management arm managing the pension fund, has bought the 50 per cent stake from AXA Group and will form a joint venture whereby AXA Real Estate will provide asset management services.

Chief investment officer for real estate at NBIM, Karsten Kallevig, said the deal reflects the fund’s preference to form partnerships with investors that both own and operate properties.

Sponsored Content

At the end of March, the fund had an asset allocation of 61.3 per cent in equities, 38.6 per cent fixed in income and 0.1 per cent in real estate.

Equities have been the stellar performer for the fund in the past year. The fund’s equity holdings, which represent about 1 per cent of the world’s listed companies, returned 13.3 per cent in 2010 in international currency terms, while fixed income investments returned 4.1 per cent.

The overall return was 1.1 percentage points higher than the return on the fund’s benchmark indexes. This marks the fifth-best performance by the fund since it was set up in 1990.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Innovation to align investors with the social good

The CFA Institute’s president John Rogers, believes there is evidence of innovation in investment products that meet the needs of asset owners in a more sustainable, longer-term way, and points to the work of professors and advisors to the CFA , Andrew Lo of MIT and Robert Shiller of Yale.   One of the main

Adding value through risk allocations

2013 was a great year to add value by using risk to assign asset allocation, according to chief investment officer of Windham Capital, Lucas Turton, whose fund added 300 basis points above benchmark last year by dynamically allocating according to risk.   Windham Capital Management’s style is to focus on measuring and understanding risk to

Alternatives increase as investors manage to outcomes

Investor allocations to alternatives will increase over the next three years as the focus on outcome-oriented investments heightens, according to respondents in the annual conexust1f.flywheelstaging.com /Casey Quirk Global Fiduciary CIO sentiment survey. The second annual survey, which included respondents from 56 asset owners with combined assets of $3 trillion, showed an accelerating trend to moving

Organisational change: asset owners 2.0

A key ingredient for success in any organisation is strong leadership. It is common in the corporate world for the chief executive to change every five to 10 years as the organisation evolves. Are the same principles true for large institutional investors?     Roger Urwin, global head of investment content at Towers Watson, who

The rise of the foreign trustee

Which developed world pension fund will become the first to have a Chinese national sit on its board? The debate on board diversity has focused on gender, race and age, but in future it could extend to having representatives of the countries your fund would most like to invest in. As funds travel along the

Economic growth outlook positive but integrity needs work

The outlook for economic growth this year is markedly positive, compared to last year, but capital market integrity is not improving, according to the opinions of more than 6,000 CFA Institute members. The CFA Institute global markets sentiment survey, measures the views of its members on market integrity and economic issues. This year’s survey, which

Previous