Concerned about the recent decline in stock prices, French President Nicolas
Sarkozy, yesterday (Tuesday) called for the creation of European sovereign
wealth funds. The funds would be virtual carbon copies of the state-owned
investment vehicles that have sprung up from Beijing to Abu Dhabi to disperse
their respective nations’ cash reserves in foreign assets.
Addressing the European Parliament, President Sarkozy implored his European
contemporaries to embrace the current period of economic upheaval as an
opportunity to restructure the global financial system. According to the
Daily Telegraph, he also articulated the concern of
many Western authorities that sovereign wealth funds, located primarily in Asia
and the Middle East, could use their massive cash reserves to scoop up key
foreign assets at extraordinarily low valuations.
“Stock markets are at historic lows. I do not want European citizens to wake
up a few months from now and discover that European companies belong to
non-European capital which has bought at the lowest point of the stock
exchange," Sarkozy said. "I would ask that all of us consider how interesting it
would be to set up sovereign funds in each of our countries – and maybe these
national sovereign funds could now and again coordinate to give an industrial
response to the crisis.”
Sovereign wealth funds, or SWFs, currently control an estimated $3 trillion.
That’s already believed to be more than the $1.5 trillion to $2 trillion held by
worldwide hedge funds (though some sources put the hedge-fund estimate as high
as $5 trillion).
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) and other experts predict the state-run
venture funds could control $12 trillion by 2015. But
Money Morning Investment Director
Keith Fitz-Gerald thinks the ultimate total will
actually be much higher: Even now, he estimates that the total capital under the
control of the “Global Cash Barons” is more likely to reach $20 trillion by the
middle of the next decade.