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An oil platforms in the North Sea, Norway, December 3 2019. Picture: REUTERS/Ints Kalnins
An oil platforms in the North Sea, Norway, December 3 2019. Picture: REUTERS/Ints Kalnins

Oslo — Norway’s $1.6-trillion sovereign wealth fund, the world’s largest, posted a record profit of 1.2-trillion kroner ($109bn) on Thursday for the first quarter of 2024, boosted by strong tech stocks and a continuing boom in artificial intelligence.

It was the fund’s highest quarterly return in absolute terms since its creation in 1996 and compared with a profit of 893-billion kroner at the same time a year ago. The fund’s relative total return was 9.1% in the January-March period.

“It is a remarkably strong quarter,” deputy CEO Trond Grande said, adding that the return was driven by the world’s top tech companies, dubbed “the Magnificent Seven”, in particular Nvidia and Microsoft.

“For Nvidia, it is making the hardware for AI,” he said. “And for other companies that are far ahead in looking at how they can apply this new technology, and of course monetise it, like Microsoft in the enterprise space and Meta Platforms in the social media space.”

The fund invests the proceeds of the Norwegian state’s oil and gas production into stocks, bonds, unlisted property and renewable projects abroad. Its size is equivalent to $283,000 for every Norwegian man, woman and child.

The deputy CEO of the Norwegian sovereign wealth fund Trond Grande. Picture: REUTERS/Gwladys Fouche
The deputy CEO of the Norwegian sovereign wealth fund Trond Grande. Picture: REUTERS/Gwladys Fouche

Since the end of the first quarter, markets had been “a little bit more jittery”, Grande said, given delayed expectations that the US Federal Reserve and other central banks would cut interest rates. The fund expected inflation to remain “a little bit more sticky than perhaps was anticipated”.

“As long as you don’t see the inflation moving closer to the banks’ targets, rates are going to stay where they are — the short-term rates,” Grande said.

Regarding the conflict between Iran and Israel, markets had been “somewhat muted” in their reactions, he said, perhaps as oil supply was now less reliant on Middle East resources given the growth in oil production from US shale over the past two decades.

Up to March 31, 72.1% of the Norwegian wealth fund’s assets were held in stocks, while 26% was invested in fixed income, 1.8% in unlisted real estate and 0.1% in unlisted renewable energy infrastructure.

The fund’s overall return on investment of 6.3% was 0.1 percentage point below its benchmark index, it said. A unit of Norway’s central bank manages the fund, which owns 1.5% of all globally listed shares and has stakes in about 8,900 companies.

Separately on Thursday, the fund said it would vote in favour of a proposal letting NatWest buy back more of its stock from the British government, amid efforts to speed up privatisation.

Reuters

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