Panic

February 01, 2008


There is public and political pressure to keep out or at least regulate sovereign wealth funds. It must be resisted

IFLR's journalists in London, New York and Hong Kong all agree: people are overreacting to sovereign wealth funds.

These controversial investment vehicles have become increasingly political since the turn of the year. French President Nicolas Sarkozy spoke out against them and German Chancellor Angela Merkel reinforced her stance against them. Even in the midst of the US race for President, Hillary Clinton tried to turn the topic into a vote winner.

But lawyers all round the world say the same thing: sovereign wealth funds are old news, there is no need to panic and any reaction needs to a considered one.

At the moment, it is estimated that the top sovereign wealth funds hold around $2.5 trillion in assets. By 2015, this is expected to have risen to $12 trillion. China Investment Corporation can already afford to buy Morgan Stanley four times over. Imagine what it could purchase by the...




"The culture is not to disclose. And that’s partly driven by the rules"

The SFC's Martin Wheatley on the problem of disclosure in Hong Kong

Web seminars

US and EU hybrid capital
February 3 2010
The future of hybrids, in a popular discussion between IFLR, Morrison & Foerster and Calyon

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March 2010

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