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Exchange rate risk in the Government Pension Fund Global

Børsum, Øystein
Working paper
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URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11250/95297
Date
2011
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  • CME Working Papers [113]
Abstract
The Government Pension Fund Global (the Fund) is an important instrument of

national saving. In a national perspective, the Fund's role is to save from the cur-

rent export surplus (oil and gas) to nance future purchases of goods and services

produced abroad (imports). In this perspective, exchange rate risk relates to the

di erence between the currency allocation in the Fund and the currency composi-

tion of future imports. Exchange rate risk amounts to deviations from international

purchasing power parity (PPP) in tradable goods. A literature review suggests that

the evidence for PPP in the long run is considerably stronger today than commonly

thought 10-15 years ago. Also, it seems justi ed to expect large deviations from

PPP to be signi cantly more short-lived than previously thought. Given the Fund's

long investment horizon and regular withdrawals through the scal policy guide-

line, exchange rate risk seems small. This warrants a change in the geographical

allocation of the Fund. Today, more than half of the Fund's capital is invested in

Europe { a certain form of \home bias." There no longer appears to be a basis for

such a strong concentration of the investments. In fact, an argument can be made

to invest more in countries that are farther from home, e.g. in emerging markets.
Publisher
Handelshøyskolen BI, Centre for Monetary Economics (CME)
Series
CME Working paper series;1/2011

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