Economy News

Norway’s Wealth Fund Ditches Firms over Tax Transparency

For the first time, Norway’s $1.3 trillion wealth fund has pulled investments from companies because of their tax policies. Adding more of such moves in the future is likely, the fund’s CEO said.

The fund is one of the world’s largest investors, and it holds stakes in around 9,200 companies globally. It owns 1.5% of all listed stocks and has set the pace on a host of issues. These are issues in the environmental, social and corporate governance (ESG) field.

Nicolai Tangen said it had sold out of seven companies last year. Due to aggressive tax planning and cases where companies do not give information on where, and how, they pay tax.

Tangen said the companies were small but declined to give their names and business sectors. This is not to give the impression the fund has a blacklist of companies regarding their ESG practices.

More activity can be expected in this area, he added.

In 2016, Norwegian legislators ordered the fund to be more involved in global efforts to combat tax havens.

Consequently, in 2017, the fund issued its first expectation document on tax transparency. It is a document it distributes to the boards of all the companies it has invested in. Moreover, about what the fund wants them to do on a particular issue, in this case, tax transparency.

Related Post

He said the fund would revise that expectation document and publish an update in the spring. Tangen did not say what specific topics could see an update in the document.

Companies should pay tax where the value creation takes place. Tangen added how they disclose their tax situation and the level of transparency they have is important.

In Europe, global tech companies have come under fire for channelling profits through low tax countries. Additionally, for paying little tax in some states where they make vast revenues.

With Brexit Red Tape, a UK Freight Firm Struggles to Trade

Elsewhere, in just one month of post-Brexit trading, British logistics expert Jon Swallow has seen exports dive. Prices are rising, and customers are desperate. He is practically offering a counselling service.

Swallow is one of the thousands of freight forwarders and customs brokers based around Britain’s biggest ports. He has described a full customs border’s overnight introduction as akin to the country placing economic sanctions on itself.

Britain has left the European Union’s orbit on New Year’s Eve after 47 years of membership. This means exporters must now provide customs and safety declarations. They must now give health checks and rules of origin details to trade with their biggest partner.

Read also: FiatVisions review | Is it a good Forex broker?

User Review
0 (0 votes)

Recent Posts

  • Stock News

Reddit Shares Surge Amid OpenAI’s ChatGPT Training Deal

On Thursday, Reddit shares rose amid its collaboration with OpenAI to train ChatGPT on the…

1 day ago
  • Technology News

OpenAI Strikes Deal to Allow ChatGPT to Access Reddit Posts

On Thursday, OpenAI announced a collaboration enabling ChatGPT to train using data from Reddit discussions…

1 day ago
  • Commodity News

Sugar Prices Pulled Down by Abundant Global Supplies

On Thursday, sugar prices extended their losses amid reports indicating lower futures driven by a…

1 day ago
  • Stock News

Nio Stock Dips Amid Onvo Launch to Rival Tesla’s Model Y

On Wednesday, Nio stock declined after it entered fierce market competition with the debut of…

2 days ago
  • Broker News

Robinhood Dominates Meme Stock Trading: $5B Daily Volume

Robinhood has again become central in another meme stock surge. CEO Vlad Tenev shared that…

2 days ago
  • Technology News

Nio Unveils Its First Onvo EV in Direct Challenge to Model Y

On Wednesday, Nio introduced the first offering of its new low-priced Onvo brand, the L60…

2 days ago

This website uses cookies.