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Sovereign Wealth Funds’ Historic Drop Despite Asia Mega-Deals

The combined value of the world’s sovereign wealth and public pension funds slumped for the first time in 2022


Singapore sovereign wealth fund Temasek Holdings has written off its investment in FTX crypto exchange following its collapse two weeks ago.
Singapore sovereign wealth fund Temasek, spent $7 billion buying testing, inspection and certification firm Element Materials in 2022.

 

Asian sovereign wealth funds scored some of the biggest deals in history in 2022 but it was still a hugely turbulent year for stock and bond markets.

The last 12 months saw the combined value of the world’s sovereign wealth and public pension funds drop for the first time ever – to the tune of $2.2 trillion, an annual study of the sector has estimated.

The report on state-owned investment vehicles by industry specialist Global SWF found that the value of assets managed by sovereign wealth funds fell to $10.6 trillion from $11.5 trillion, while those of public pension funds dropped to $20.8 trillion from $22.1 trillion.

 

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Global SWF’s Diego López said the main driver had been the “simultaneous and significant” 10%-plus corrections suffered by major bond and stock markets, a combination that had not happened in 50 years.

It came as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine boosted commodity prices and drove already-rising inflation rates to 40-year highs. In response, the US Federal reserve and other major central banks jacked up their interest rates causing a global market sell-off.

“These are paper losses and some of the funds will not see them realised in their role as long-term investors,” López said. “But it is quite telling of the moment we are living.”

The report, which analysed 455 state-owned investors with a combined $32 trillion in assets, found that Denmark’s ATP had had the toughest year anywhere with an estimated 45% plunge that lost $34 billion for Danish pensioners.

Despite all the turbulence though, the money funds spent buying up companies, property or infrastructure still jumped 12% compared with 2021.

 

Temasek’s $7 Billion Outlay

A record $257.5 billion was deployed across 743 deals, with sovereign wealth funds also sealing a record number of $1 billion-plus “mega-deals”.

Singapore’s supersized $690 billion GIC fund topped the table, spending just over $39 billion in 72 deals. Over half of that was piled into real estate with a clear bias towards logistics properties.

In fact, five of the 10 largest investments ever by state-owned investors took place in 2022, starting in January when another Singapore vehicle, Temasek, spent $7 billion buying testing, inspection and certification firm Element Materials from private equity fund Bridgepoint.

“If financial markets continue to fall in 2023, it is likely that sovereign funds will keep ‘chasing elephants’ as an effective way of meeting their capital allocation requirements,” the report said.

It tipped SWFs from the Gulf such as ADIA, Mubadala, ADQ, PIF, QIA to become much more active in buying up Western firms having received large injections of oil revenue money over the past year.

 

  • Reuters with additional editing by Sean O’Meara

 

Read more:

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Sean O'Meara

Sean O'Meara is an Editor at Asia Financial. He has been a newspaper man for more than 30 years, working at local, regional and national titles in the UK as a writer, sub-editor, page designer and print editor. A football, cricket and rugby fan, he has a particular interest in sports finance.