Norway’s sovereign-wealth fund is
pouring a bigger share of its cash into Africa in a bid to capture some
of the fastest growth in the global economy.
The $890 billion fund, which is already in South Africa,
is spreading its investments to the north and west of the continent in
search of opportunities, Yngve Slyngstad, chief executive officer of
Norges Bank Investment Management, which manages the fund, said in an
interview on Wednesday at Bloomberg’s headquarters in New York.
“What’s new is that we have crept north — Kenya and
Nigeria — we’re looking at quite a few west African countries,” he said.
“In North Africa, for quite some time, we’ve invested in Morocco and
Egypt, there are also some investments coming in Tunisia.”
Africa has emerged as one of the fastest growing regions
globally. And while the slump in oil has hurt Nigeria and Angola, the
International Monetary Fund still sees growth rates for Sub-Saharan
Africa that are twice those for developed nations. The number of
middle-class households in the region has tripled since 2010, according
to Johannesburg-based Standard Bank Group Ltd.
The wealth fund is expanding into emerging and frontier
markets as returns in the developed world get eroded by historic
monetary easing programmes.
“It’s fair to say that monetary policy does affect pricing
in today’s market to such an extent that monetary policy itself has
been a risk you have to watch,” Slyngstad said.
He may also get the go-ahead next year to invest in
infrastructure projects and to add more real estate to the fund’s
swelling portfolio, as Norway looks into the merits of such a move. As
the fund expands its geographical reach, it relies on local investment
advisers to guide its decisions.
“There are several countries that are coming up,”
Slyngstad said. “All of these investments are done by external managers,
generally by managers in the same country. It means our external
managers team has been flying around a lot in the last year, they’ve had
a lot of flights to Africa.”
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