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Norges Bank

Coordinates:59°54′31.07″N10°44′36.66″E / 59.9086306°N 10.7435167°E /59.9086306; 10.7435167
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Central bank of Norway
Norges Bank
Noregs Bank
Headquarters at Bankplassen 2
Headquarters at Bankplassen 2
HeadquartersOslo
Established14 June 1816 (209 years ago) (1816-06-14)
Ownership100%state ownership[1]
GovernorIda Wolden Bache
Central bank ofNorway
CurrencyNorwegian krone
NOK (ISO 4217)
Reserves750 billion NOK (2024)[2]
Bank rate5.50%[3]
Interest rate target4.50%[3]
Interest on reserves3.50%[3]
Websitenorges-bank.no
Norway bonds
  10 year
  5 year
  1 year
  6 month
  3 month

Norges Bank (Bokmål:Norges Bank,Nynorsk:Noregs Bank,lit.'Bank of Norway') is thecentral bank of Norway. It is responsible for managing theGovernment Pension Fund of Norway, which is the world's largestsovereign wealth fund,[4] as well as the bank's ownforeign exchange reserves.[5]

History

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The history of the central bank of Norway can be traced back to 1816, when, two years after the separation from Denmark and the union with Sweden, Norges Bank was established by an Act of the Storting (the Norwegian parliament) on 14 June. The bank then decided that the monetary unit was to be the speciedaler (rixdollar), divided into 120 skillings or five ort ("rigsort") of 24 skillings each.[6]

The Money Act of 17 April 1875 discontinued the terms daler and skilling, and it was decided that the monetary unit should be a krone, divided into 100 øre. This was done to prepare for Norway's entry, on 16 October that year, into theScandinavian Monetary Union. This union had been established between Denmark and Sweden in 1873 on the recommendation of a joint commission (in which Norway participated) to establish a common Scandinavian coin based on gold. It meant that the other countries' coins were to be legal tender on the same basis as those struck at home. The union functioned until 1914; thereafter it lacked all practical significance, but was not formally abolished until 1972.[6]

On 1 January 1897 the seat of Norges Bank was moved to Kristiania (Oslo) fromTrondheim, and in 1906 a new headquarters building on Bankplassen was opened - for 80 employees including the workers in the banknote printing plant.[6]

During the Second World War, the seat of Norges Bank was temporarily moved to London in 1940, in that the Norwegian government-in-exile established a new board. The bank's gold reserves were evacuated via Åndalsnes, Molde and Tromsø to London, and from there to New York and Ottawa. This gold and the bank's other currency reserves were under the control of the London board. At the same time, the bank continued its operations in Norway under the direction of the Nazis until the war was over and the London board stepped down. A commission of inquiry after the war concluded that the bank's Oslo management had taken a firm and correct attitude towards the Nazi authorities.[6] In 1962, the Mint Supervisory Authority and the Royal Mint were transferred from the state to Norges Bank.[6]

In March 2025, Norges Bank Investment Management announced that it has acquired a 49% stake in two offshore wind farms under construction in Denmark and Germany from RWE for 1.4 billion euros ($1.5 billion). The purchase includes stakes in RWE's Nordseecluster and Thor wind projects, expected to have a combined capacity of 2.64 gigawatts, enough to power over 2.6 million households. The deal reduces RWE’s net cash investments by about 4 billion euros, while RWE will continue to handle construction and operation.[7]

Norges Bank Investment Management

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Norges Bank Investment Management (NBIM) is a separate branch of Norges Bank and is responsible for the management of theGovernment Pension Fund - Global. NBIM also manages Norges Bank'sforeign exchange reserves. NBIM invests the fund's assets and the foreign exchange reserves in internationalequities andfixed incomeinstruments,money market instruments andderivatives.

List of Central Bank Governors

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The following is a list of past and present governors of the Norges Bank. The Act of 1892 gave the board a permanent chairman. In 1985 the term Executive Board was introduced, and the chairman was entitled Governor of the Central Bank, the following people have served as chairmen and governors.[8]

London branch

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See also

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References

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  1. ^Weidner, Jan (2017)."The Organisation and Structure of Central Banks"(PDF).Katalog der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek.
  2. ^"Foreign exchange reserves Q1 2024"(PDF). Norges. 24 May 2024. p. 2. Retrieved4 June 2024.
  3. ^abc"Rate decision May 2024". Norges. 3 May 2024. Retrieved4 June 2024.
  4. ^"Top 100 Largest Sovereign Wealth Fund Rankings by Total Assets - SWFI".www.swfinstitute.org. Retrieved2024-02-27.
  5. ^"About the Bank".
  6. ^abcdeNorges Bank."Norge Bank's History". Norges Bank.
  7. ^"Norway sovereign wealth fund buys offshore wind farms stakes for $1.5 bln". March 31, 2025.
  8. ^"Governors of Norges Bank".norges-bank.no. April 1, 2022. RetrievedApril 2, 2022.

External links

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