Temasek Portfolio Value Shrinks for First Time Since Global Debt Crisis
July 07 2016 - 5:40AM
Dow Jones News
SINGAPORE—Singapore's state investment firm Temasek Holdings
Pte. Ltd. said on Thursday the value of its portfolio dropped for
the first time since the global financial crisis largely due to
falls in the share prices of its holdings in financial and
resources companies.
Temasek, the world's twelfth-largest institution of its kind
according to the U.S.-based Sovereign Wealth Fund Institute, said
its total assets dropped to 242 billion Singapore dollars (US$180
billion) in the year ended March 31, from S$266 billion a year
earlier, the first such decline in seven years. Its net profit also
fell by 43% to S$8 billion.
The fund, which holds large stakes in banks such as Standard
Chartered PLC and China Construction Bank Corp., as well as major
local companies like Singapore Airlines Ltd., warned the current
financial year, which ends in March 2017, could prove challenging
too.
"Equity markets around the world will remain susceptible to
bouts of volatility in the short to medium term," said Michael
Buchanan, Temasek's head of strategy. He said the increased
uncertainty reflected an "ongoing hangover" from the financial
crisis eight years ago and lower returns should be expected in the
coming years.
Temasek's poor results show how big sovereign-wealth funds,
which rank among the world's largest investors, are struggling to
generate strong returns with interest rates near zero—and sometimes
in negative territory -- in major developed countries, and growth
moderating in key emerging markets like China. Around 70% of
Temasek's funds are invested in Asia, with the rest spread roughly
evenly between North America, Europe, and Australia and New
Zealand.
Norway's near-$900 billion sovereign-wealth fund, the largest of
its kind globally, last year recorded its weakest performance since
2011, which it blamed partly on slowing growth in emerging
markets.
Banks, which have been struggling with narrowing interest
margins, were among the hardest-hit of Temasek's investments. The
value of its 16% stake in Standard Chartered, a bank heavily
exposed to emerging markets and commodity companies, plunged 43%,
while the worth of its holding in Singapore bank DBS Group Holdings
Ltd. fell 24%.
The firm also suffered a decline in value on some its holdings
in commodities companies, particularly those in the oil industry.
Its 49% stake in Singapore-based Sembcorp Industries Ltd., one of
the world's largest rig builders, dropped by 28% in value.
In an attempt to improve returns and find companies with better
growth prospects, Temasek has been shifting little-by-little into
the technology sector, and says it is looking at making investments
in newer industries such as artificial intelligence and life
sciences.
At the end of March, 25% of its portfolio was in
telecommunications, media and technology companies, up from 24% a
year earlier, while its weighting toward financial services fell to
23% from 28%.
Among major new investments in 2015, Temasek took an undisclosed
stake in Beijing-based ride-hailing app Didi Chuxing Technology Co.
and Airbnb Inc., a U.S.-based home-sharing website. Big divestments
included the sale of its stakes in U.K. bank Lloyds Banking Group
and Singapore semiconductor firm STATS ChipPAC Ltd.
Write to P.R. Venkat at venkat.pr@wsj.com and Jake Maxwell Watts
at jake.watts@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
July 07, 2016 05:25 ET (09:25 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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