Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Norway’s sovereign wealth fund sells its shares in 11 Israeli companies

Date:

Norway’s Oil Fund Divests from 11 Israeli Companies Amid Gaza Crisis

In a significant move reflecting growing ethical scrutiny of global investments, Norway’s $1.4 trillion sovereign wealth fund—the world’s largest—has sold its holdings in 11 Israeli companies. The decision, announced Monday by the fund’s management, directly cites the “serious humanitarian crisis” in Gaza as the catalyst for this portfolio adjustment.

A Preemptive Step in a Complex Conflict

The Government Pension Fund Global (GPFG), commonly known as the Oil Fund, confirmed it completed the sales of these specific holdings in recent days. The companies sold were those not included in the Norwegian Finance Ministry’s equity benchmark index, meaning they were part of the fund’s actively managed, non-index portfolio. The fund did not publicly name the 11 companies.

Nicolai Tangen, CEO of Norges Bank Investment Management (NBIM), which oversees the fund, framed the action as a response to extraordinary and deteriorating conditions. “We are invested in companies that operate in a country at war, and conditions in the West Bank and Gaza have recently worsened,” Tangen stated. “These measures were taken in response to extraordinary circumstances.”

Streamlining Oversight and Due Diligence

The divestment is coupled with an operational change: the fund is bringing all its Israeli-equity investments under direct, in-house management. It is terminating contracts with external managers who previously handled portions of this portfolio. The management team indicated this consolidation will simplify oversight and reduce the workload for its independent Council on Ethics, which monitors investments against Norway’s ethical guidelines.

“This will simplify the management of our investments in this market and reduce the number of companies that the fund’s council on ethics monitors,” Tangen added. The fund also announced it would “further strengthen its due diligence” regarding its remaining investments in the region.

The Fund’s Scale and Ethical Mandate

To understand the weight of this decision, one must consider the fund’s immense scale. According to NBIM’s official website, the Oil Fund owns approximately 1.5% of all listed global equities, with investments in around 9,000 companies across dozens of countries. Its ethical guidelines, established by the Norwegian parliament, prohibit investments in companies that contribute to serious violations of human rights, among other criteria.

The fund’s exposure to Israel was relatively small but symbolically significant. At the end of the first half of 2023, NBIM reported investments in 61 Israeli companies. The sale of 11 represents a targeted reduction of about 18% of that specific portfolio, not a full exit from the Israeli market.

Historical Context of Ethical Divestments

This is not the first time the fund has adjusted its portfolio based on ethical concerns related to conflict zones. The management noted it had already intensified its monitoring of Israeli holdings in the autumn of 2023, following the October 7th attacks and the onset of the war in Gaza. That intensified review led to the sale of “several” firms prior to this latest, broader action.

The fund’s history includes precedent-setting exclusions, such as its divestment from companies involved in the production of cluster munitions and, more recently, its exit from companies operating in the Russian market following the full-scale invasion of Ukraine. These actions consistently stem from assessments that specific companies’ operations contribute to grossly unethical conduct, as defined by its mandate.

Global Signal from a Passive Giant

While the financial impact on the Oil Fund’s overall performance is negligible, the move carries considerable symbolic weight. As a benchmark for responsible investment, Norway’s fund often sets a tone that other large institutional investors watch closely. Its decisions are rooted in a long-term, risk-based perspective that increasingly incorporates geopolitical and reputational risks associated with operating in conflict areas.

The explicit linkage of the sale to the “humanitarian crisis” in Gaza marks a clear escalation in the fund’s public reasoning. It moves beyond traditional assessments of a company’s direct complicity in specific violations to a broader judgment about the operational environment itself—a country “at war” with severely worsened conditions.

Conclusion: Ethics in Action for a Global Owner

Norway’s sovereign wealth fund has exercised its ethical framework to reduce its exposure to a subset of Israeli companies, citing the catastrophic humanitarian situation in Gaza as the overriding reason. The action combines a direct divestment with an internal management shift, aiming to streamline its ethical oversight process. For a fund of its unparalleled size and influence, this is more than a portfolio tweak; it is a public statement that even passive, diversified global ownership carries an active responsibility to respond to unfolding humanitarian emergencies. The move underscores the evolving interpretation of fiduciary duty in an era where environmental, social, and governance (ESG) factors are inextricably linked to long-term systemic risk.

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