2015
DOI: 10.1111/joes.12125
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Rise of the Fiduciary State: A Survey of Sovereign Wealth Fund Research

Abstract: We survey the literature documenting the rise of sovereign wealth funds (SWFs), which, with assets under management of over $5.4 trillion at year‐end 2014, are a major force in global finance. Research papers have analyzed the evolution of SWFs from stabilization funds to stand‐alone wealth management funds; we both survey this research and show that more than 25 countries have launched or proposed new SWFs since January 2008. The most salient and controversial feature of SWFs is that they are state‐owned; we … Show more

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Cited by 96 publications
(18 citation statements)
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References 116 publications
(180 reference statements)
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“…We find public equity investments with sufficient data for nineteen of those funds, originating from fifteen countries, and the resulting sample we employ is described in Table 2. 9 Total assets for the funds in our list are worth of $2.97 trillion, representing 71% of total asset under management by SWFs documented by Megginson and Fotak (2014).…”
Section: Sovereign Wealth Fund Definition and Listmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…We find public equity investments with sufficient data for nineteen of those funds, originating from fifteen countries, and the resulting sample we employ is described in Table 2. 9 Total assets for the funds in our list are worth of $2.97 trillion, representing 71% of total asset under management by SWFs documented by Megginson and Fotak (2014).…”
Section: Sovereign Wealth Fund Definition and Listmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The data are assembled using multiple public sources. Megginson and Fotak (2014). For the complete list of SWFs meeting the SIL definition, see Bortolotti (2014).…”
Section: Swf Deals and Activismmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Private-sector BGs are mesoeconomic structures, but state-controlled BGs are tools of the government and thus do not fit into the synthesis we propose. State-controlled BGs are clearly important, especially in China (Ma & Lu, 2005;Fan, Wong, & Zhang, 2013;Hu, Cui, & Aulakh, 2019;Zhang et al, 2016) and Russia (Guriev, 2010), historically important in Austria (Stiefel, 2000), Canada (Arbour, 1993), Italy (Aganin & Volpin, 2005), Spain (Cuervo-Cazurra, 2018), and elsewhere, and potentially important as sovereign wealth funds that come to direct de facto BGs (Megginson & Fotak, 2015). Space constraints preclude encompassing these issues properly.…”
Section: Defining a Bgmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…новым явлением стали большие государственные инвестиционные фонды (sovereign wealth funds), чьи активы играют значительную роль в крупнейших экономиках мира (см., напр. : [Sauvant, Sachs, Jongbloed, 2012;Megginson, Fotak, 2015;Aguilera, Capape, Santiso, 2016]). Эти фонды рассматриваются как особая разновидность госкомпаний, они активно используются в качестве инструмента интернационализации, становясь заметными игроками на мировой экономической арене.…”
Section: государственные компании в международном бизнесе: отличительunclassified