Information about Sovereign Wealth Fund

Sovereign wealth fund (SWF) (Sovereign wealth funds) is a fund owned by a state composed of financial assets such as stocks, bonds, property or other financial instruments.

Sovereign wealth funds are, broadly defined, entities that can manage the national savings for the purposes of investment. The accumulated funds may have their origin in, or may represent foreign currency deposits, gold, SDRs and IMF reserve position held by central banks and monetary authorities,. along with other national assets such as pension investments, oil funds, or other industrial and financial holdings. These are assets of the sovereign nations which are typically (but not necessarily) held in domestic and different reserve currencies such as the dollar, euro and yen. The names attributed to the management entities may include central banks, official investment companies, state pension funds, sovereign oil funds and so on.

There have been attempts to distinguish funds held by sovereign entities from foreign exchange reserves held by central banks. The former can be characterized as maximizing long term return, with the latter serving short term currency stabilization and liquidity management. This distinction points in the right direction, but is still unsatisfactory. Many central banks in recent years possess reserves massively in excess of needs for liquidity or foreign exchange management. Moreover it is widely believed most have diversified hugely into assets other than short term, highly liquid monetary ones (almost no data is available however to back up this assertion). Some central banks even have begun buying equities, or derivatives of differing ilk (even if fairly safe ones, like Overnight Interest Rate swaps).

History

Most of the savings of SWFs originate in accumulated foreign currency reserves. These were formerly held only in gold, as official gold reserves. But under the Bretton Woods system, the United States pegged the dollar to gold, and allowed convertibility of dollars to gold. This effectively made dollars appear as good as gold. The U.S. later abandoned the gold standard, but the dollar has remained relatively stable as a fiat currency, and it is still the most significant reserve currency. In the 1990s and early 2000s, central banks began to hold ever more vast amounts of assets in multiple currencies. Given the sizes (beginning to surpass the total outstanding of domestic bond and stock markets), these amounts have been increasingly often invested in non-traditional banking assets by entities with a specific mission, set by the public authorities.

Sovereign wealth funds as a term has been around at least since 2005. It has become increasingly popular as the spending power of global officialdom rockets upwards.

Nature and Purpose

SWFs are typically created when governments have budgetary surpluses and have little or no international debt. This excess liquidity is not always possible or desirable to hold as money or to channel it into consumption immediately. This is especially the case when a nation depends on raw material exports like oil, copper or diamonds. To reduce the volatility of government revenues, counter the boom-bust cycles' adverse effect on government spending and the national economy or build up savings for future generations, SWFs may be created. One example of such a fund is The Government Pension Fund of Norway.

Other reasons for creating SWFs may be economical, or strategic, such as war chests for uncertain times. For example, the Kuwait Investment Authority during the Gulf war managed excess reserves above the level needed for currency reserves (although many central banks do that now). The Government of Singapore Investment Corporation is partially the expression of a desire to create an international financial center. The Korean Investment Corporation has since been similarly managed.

Examples

Some of the funds today are 21st century creations, while others have been around for decades. One of the first registered SWFs where the Kiribati Revenue Equalisation Reserve Fund. Created in 1956 when the British administration of the Gilbert Islands in Micronesia put a levy on the export of phosphates (bird manure) used in fertilizer, the fund has since then grown to $520m [1]. Despite Japan's Government Pension Investment Fund (GPIF) being mistaken for a soverign wealth fund, it originates from paychecks of citizens, and is simply managed for the citizens in individual accounts. Therefore, as it is not property of the nation and government, but individualized, it is not an SWF.

Criticisms

There are several reasons why the growth of sovereign wealth funds is attracting close attention.
  • First, as this asset pool continues to grow in size and importance, so does its potential impact on various asset markets.
  • Second, and relatedly, some critics worry that foreign investment by sovereign wealth funds raises national security concerns because the purpose of the investment might be to secure control of strategically-important industries for political rather than financial gain. These concerns have led the EU to consider whether to allow its members to use "golden shares" to block certain foreign acquisitions.http://dealbook.blogs.nytimes.com/2007/08/01/sovereign-wealth-funds-the-new-hedge-fund/ In the U.S., these concerns are addressed by the Exon-Florio Amendment to the Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act of 1988, Pub. L. No. 100-418, § 5021, 102 Stat. 1107, 1426 (codified as amended at 50 U.S.C. app. § 2170 (2000)), as administered by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS).
  • Third, sovereign wealth funds - are not nearly as homogeneous as central banks or public pension funds. However they do have a number of interesting and unique characteristics in common. These make them a distinct and potentially valuable tool for achieving certain public policy and macroeconomic goals.
  • Fourth, are central bank reserve managers - at least those among them who have accumulated massive foreign exchange reserves in recent years - starting to act more like sovereign wealth managers? What precisely is the difference between the two, and how can we expect them to develop and relate to one another in the future?

Levels

At the end of 2006, estimates on the investments held by SWFs vary between one and seven trillion US dollars, depending on how widely the net is cast (foreign exchange reserves account for around $4.5 trillion of the total ). According to the Economist SWFs market capitalization is about $2.5 trillion, However this number is highly uncertain because of the difficulty of counting SWF holdings. For comparison the total market capitalization of hedge funds might be only $1.6 trillion, although this figure is also highly uncertain (these are not assets, so in principle it excludes leverage).

Countries with the largest sovereign wealth funds
Country Fund Assets $m Inception 'Origin Approx wealth per citizen
UAEADIA Abu Dhabi Investment Authority$ 1,300,0001976Oil$1,529,000
SingaporeGIC Government of Singapore Investment Corporation$ 330,0001981Non-commodity$100,000
NorwayThe Government Pension Fund of Norway$ 315,0001990Oil$71,000
Saudi ArabiaVarious$ 300,000naOil$11,500
Saudi ArabiaSAMA Saudi Arabian Monetary AuthorityOil
KuwaitKIA Kuwait Investment Authority$ 250,0001953Oil$250,000
DubaiDIC Dubai International Capital$2004Oil
China (PRC)CIC China Investment Company Ltd$ 200,00028/9 2007Non-commodity$151
RussiaSFRF Stabilization Fund of the Russian Federation$ 141,000[1]1/1 2004Oil$1,000
China (PRC)Central Hujjin Investment Corp
(To be Merged with China Investment Co Ltd)
$ 100,0002003Non-commodity$75
SingaporeTemasek Holdings$ 100,0001974Non-commodity$30,300
AustraliaFFMA Australian Government Future Fund$ 51,0002004Non-commodity$2,400
QatarQIA Qatar Investment Authority$ 50,000[2]2000Oil$250,000
US (Alaska)APFC Alaska Permanent Fund$ 40,1001976Oil$61,000
Libya-$ 40,0002007Oil$7,200
BruneiBIA Brunei Investment Agency$ 30,0001983Oil$90,100
South KoreaKIA Korea Investment Corporation$ 20,0002005Non-commodity$417
MalaysiaKN Khazanah Nasional$ 18,3001993Non-commodity$658
KazakhstanKNF Kazakhstan National Fund$ 17,8002000Oil$1170
CanadaAIM Alberta Heritage Fund$ 16,6001976Oil$4,800
Taiwan(ROC)NSF National Stabilisation Fund$ 15,0002000Non-commodity$652
IranOSF Oil Stabilisation Fund$ 12,9001999Oil$174

See also

References

1. ^ [2]
2. ^ [3]

External links

Source

Articles

Fund may refer to:
  • Funding, providing capital (funds) for a project, a person, a business or any other private or public institutions
  • Collective investment scheme, often referred to as managed funds, mutual funds or funds

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A state is a political association with effective dominion over a geographic area. It usually includes the set of institutions that claim the authority to make the rules that govern the people of the society in that territory, though its status as a state often depends in part on
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Finance studies and addresses the ways in which individuals, businesses, and organizations raise, allocate, and use monetary resources over time, taking into account the risks entailed in their projects.
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asset is meant probable future economic benefits controlled by an entity as a result of past transactions or events and from which future economic benefits may be obtained.
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Stocks are devices used since medieval times for public humiliation, corporal punishment, and torture. The stocks are similar to the pillory and the pranger, as each consists of large, hinged, wooden boards; the difference, however, is that when a person is placed in the stocks,
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BOND (Building Object Network Databases) started development in late 2000 as a rapid application development tool for the GNOME Desktop by treshna Enterprises. Its aim was to fill a gap that traditional Microsoft Windows applications like Borland Delphi, Microsoft Access
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Property law
Part of the common law series
Acquisition of property
Gift  · Adverse possession  · Deed
Lost, mislaid, and abandoned property
Alienation  · Bailment  · License
Estates in land
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Financial instruments is a term used to denote any form of funding medium - mostly those used for borrowing in money markets, e. g. bills of exchange, bonds, etc. (Ref: [1] )

Categorization


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currency is a unit of exchange, facilitating the transfer of goods and/or services. It is one form of money, where money is anything that serves as a medium of exchange, a store of value, and a standard of value. A currency is the dominant medium of exchange.
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GOLD refers to one of the following:
  • GOLD (IEEE) is an IEEE program designed to garner more student members at the university level (Graduates of the Last Decade).
  • GOLD (parser) is an open source BNF parser.

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Special Drawing Rights (SDRs) is a potential claim on the freely usable currencies of International Monetary Fund members. SDRs have the ISO 4217 currency code XDR.

Definition


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IMF is an abbreviation for:
  • Intelligent Message Filter, server-side message filtering, heuristics-based message analysis
  • International Metalworkers' Federation, a global union federation

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Economic policy
Monetary policy
Central bank   Money supply
Fiscal policy
Spending   Deficit   Debt
Trade policy
Tariff   Trade agreement

Finance
Financial market
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asset is meant probable future economic benefits controlled by an entity as a result of past transactions or events and from which future economic benefits may be obtained.
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A reserve currency (or anchor currency) is a currency which is held in significant quantities by many governments and institutions as part of their foreign exchange reserves.
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United States dollar
dólar estadounidense (Spanish)
dólar amerikanu (Tetum)
dólar americano

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Euro
Ευρώ (Greek)
Евро[1]

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Japanese yen
日本円 (Japanese)

Â¥10000 engraved by Edoardo Chiossone Circulated coins in all 6 denominations
ISO 4217 Code JPY
User(s) Japan

Inflation 0.
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Foreign exchange reserves (also called Forex reserves) in a strict sense are only the foreign currency deposits held by central banks and monetary authorities.
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GOLD refers to one of the following:
  • GOLD (IEEE) is an IEEE program designed to garner more student members at the university level (Graduates of the Last Decade).
  • GOLD (parser) is an open source BNF parser.

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Gold reserves (or gold holdings) are held by central banks as a store of value. At the end of 2004 central banks and official organizations held 19% of all above ground gold as a reserve asset.
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The Bretton Woods system of international monetary management established the rules for commercial and financial relations among the world's major industrial states. The Bretton Woods system was the first example of a fully negotiated monetary order intended to govern monetary
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United States dollar
dólar estadounidense (Spanish)
dólar amerikanu (Tetum)
dólar americano

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In economics, fiat currency or fiat money is money backed by government demand for it as legal tender in payment of legal liabilities, such as taxes. It is often associated with paper money because legal liabilities are created and settled by documents which are usually
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Market liquidity is a business, economics or investment term that refers to an asset's ability to be easily converted through an act of buying or selling without causing a significant movement in the price and with minimum loss of value.
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The Government Pension Fund of Norway comprises two entirely separate funds:
  • The Government Pension Fund - Global (formerly The Government Petroleum Fund)
  • The Government Pension Fund - Norway (formerly The National Insurance Scheme Fund)


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The Kuwait Investment Authority (KIA) is Kuwait's government investment arm, specializing in local and foreign investment. It was founded to manage the funds of the Kuwaiti Government in light of financial surplusses after the discovery of oil.
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Gulf War or Persian Gulf War (2 August 1990 – 28 February 1991)[4][5] was a conflict between Iraq and a coalition force from 35 nations[6]
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Government of Singapore Investment Corporation

Private
Founded 1981
Headquarters Singapore

Key people Lee Kuan Yew, Chairman
Lim Siong Guan, Group Managing Director

Industry Investment services
Products N/A
Revenue N/A
Website www.gic.com.
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Currency Australian dollar (AUD)
Fiscal year no data
'''Trade organisations PARTA
Statistics
GDP (PPP) $79 million (2001 est.) (224th [https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/rankorder/2001rank.html])
GDP growth 1.5% (2001 est.
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