Finance Minister Colm Imbert said yesterday the Heritage and Stabilisation Fund (HSF) has increased in value this year.
At a press conference hosted by the Office of the Prime Minister yesterday, Imbert criticised what he said was a “misleading” Sunday Express article which the finance minister said “bemoaned” what it referred to as a 16 per cent loss in the value of the HSF in 2022.
According to Imbert, the net asset value of the Heritage and Stabilisation Fund was US$5.466 billion (TT$37.17 billion) on Friday June 9, 2023.
This, he added, is an increase of US$754 million (TT$5.127 billion) in the actual value of the fund over the last nine months since September 2022.
Excluding a deposit made in December 2022, the fund has generated comprehensive income of almost US$600 million since then, the minister added.
“The figures, data and conclusions published in the Sunday Express article of June 11, 2023, on the HSF are over eight months old, out of date, misleading and wholly irrelevant because the value of the fund fluctuates over time, as do all sovereign wealth funds, since these funds react to the performance of global stock markets and financial instruments.
“This is illustrated by the fact that the net asset value of the HSF increased by US$327 million (TT$2.224 billion) in the last six months, between January 1, 2023, and June 9, 2023, without any deposits into the fund from the Government during that period,” Imbert added.
The most recent publicly available report of the HSF is for the period October 1, 2022 to December 31, 2022. The quarterly report plus the annual report of the HSF for the period ending September 30, 2011 were both published on the Ministry of Finance website on June 7. In disclosing the net asset value of the HSF as at June 9, 2023, Imbert cited information that is not available to the public.
He also noted that a further illustration of the volatility of global markets is the fact that during the two-month period May 15, 2020, to June 19, 2020, at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, the HSF increased in value by US$297 million (TT$2.019 billion).
“More strikingly, again during the COVID-19 pandemic, during the two-week period April 3, 2020, to April 17, 2020, the value of the fund increased by US$286 million (TT$1.945 billion) in just 14 days. If the inverted logic of the Express article is to be followed, the fund managers should have received a national award for earning almost TT$2 billion in two weeks in 2020,” the finance minister further noted.
Also, he said the annual report of the Heritage and Stabilisation Fund for the 12-month period ending on September 30, 2022 was laid in Parliament on February 3, 2023, over five months ago, and has therefore been a public document for 129 days.
“It is curious that the Express waited five months to comment on that outdated report,” Imbert added.