Norway Sovereign Wealth Fund Builds Tool to Fix Investment Errors - Bloomberg
The world’s largest wealth fund is working on a tool it hopes will help its asset managers learn from their mistakes, by simulating the kind of extreme stress they’re otherwise only likely to experience a few times in their lives.
Nicolai Tangen, the chief executive officer of Norway’s $1.3 trillion sovereign investment vehicle, wants to apply methods used in the world of professional sports to help his staff cope better with crises.
The 54-year-old, who started as CEO in September after working as a London-based hedge-fund manager, has already hired a sports psychologist who trains military pilots to assist him in his new role. Tangen says part of the idea is to shape the culture at the fund, so staff never feel tempted to cover up their missteps.
“If you can’t talk about your mistakes in asset management, then you’ve got nothing to do here,” Tangen said in a podcast from the NHH Norwegian School of Economics. “That’s the only way to get better. Now, we’re going to put our mistakes into a system.”
The simulator will, among other things, be fed “hundreds of millions of data points from the various portfolio managers” to find out how they act under stress and how good they are at contrarian investments, Tangen said in comments published on NHH’s website on Jan. 21
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