Norway wealth fund hits record 20 trillion crowns

A 2019 file photo of Equinor’s Johan Sverdrup oilfield platforms and accommodation jack-up rig in the North Sea off Norway. (Ints Kalnins/Reuters)

The value of Norway’s sovereign wealth fund, the world’s largest, rose to a record 20 trillion crowns ($1.80 trillion) on Friday, doubling its value in just five years as oil and gas revenue flowed in and stock markets rose.

Built since 1996 as rainy-day savings, the fund owns about 1.5% of all listed stocks globally and has grown to almost four times the size of Norway’s annual gross domestic product, far exceeding original projections.

The fund’s value was comparable in size to the annual GDP of Australia, a country with five times the population of Norway.

The fund declined to comment.

Norges Bank Investment Management, which operates the fund, invests some 70% of assets in global stocks, about 25% in bonds and the rest in real estate and renewable energy plants, with most of its portfolio tracking international market indexes.

Its current value corresponds to about $321,000 for every man, woman and child living in the country of 5.6 million people.

Its single biggest holding was in U.S. government bonds, amounting to $136 billion or 7.5% of the fund at June 30, while the top corporate holdings were Microsoft Corp with $41 billion, Apple Inc with $35 billion and Nvidia at $34 billion.

The fund hit the 10 trillion crowns milestone in October 2019, and was boosted further in the following years by global economic stimulus during the COVID pandemic and by soaring natural gas prices after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

The strength of the U.S. dollar and the euro also boosted the value of the fund as measured in Norwegian crowns.

Related stories from around the North: 

Norway: Norway’s oil minister: “We need new discoveries”, The Independent Barents Observer

Russia: Russian renewable energy soon without foreign partners, The Independent Barents Observer

United StatesBiden closes half of NPR-A acreage in Arctic Alaska to oil drilling, Alaska Public Media

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