The Government Pension Fund Global manages Norway’s oil revenues in order to finance the country’s generous welfare state when its oil and gas wells run dry (IGOR GEDILAGHINE)

Oslo (AFP) – Norway’s sovereign wealth fund, the world’s biggest, suffered a loss of 485 billion kroner (50 billion euros, $57 billion) last year, the country’s central bank said Wednesday.

The bank, which runs the fund, blamed the 6.1 percent drop — its second worst yearly result ever — on volatile stock markets. 

“Although performance was weak in 2018, the long-term return has been good and higher than the return on the benchmark index,” said the bank’s governor Oystein Olsen.

Equity investments, which represented 66 percent of the fund’s portfolio, fell 9.5 percent.

Fixed-income investments were down 0.6 percent, while investments in unlisted real estate rose 7.5 percent.

The Government Pension Fund Global, which saw its total value drop to 8.25 trillion kroner at end of last year from 8.48 trillion in 2017, manages Norway’s oil revenues in order to finance the country’s generous welfare state when its oil and gas wells run dry.

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