Crown Heritage Investment Fund: Difference between revisions

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The '''Crown Heritage Investment Fund (CHIF)''' is the {{wp|sovereign wealth fund}} of the {{wp|United Kingdom}}. Established by the {{wp|British}} government in 1976 to initially manage the revenue generated by the {{wp|North Sea}} oil, it has since expanded and diversified into various industries including {{wp|finance}}, {{wp|technology}}, {{wp|energy}}, and {{wp|healthcare}}. With an estimated $2.08 trillion in assets, it is the largest sovereign wealth fund in the world and also one of only two alongside the {{wp|Government Pension Fund of Norway}} to be valued at $1 trillion and above. Overall, its main aims include investing funds on behalf of the {{wp|British}} government, strengthen the {{wp|British}} economy, as well as preserve and enhance the purchasing power of the {{wp|United Kingdom}}'s foreign reserves.
The '''Crown Heritage Investment Fund (CHIF)''' is the {{wp|sovereign wealth fund}} of the {{wp|United Kingdom}}. Established by the {{wp|British}} government in 1976 to initially manage the revenue generated by the {{wp|North Sea}} oil, it has since expanded and diversified into various industries including {{wp|finance}}, {{wp|technology}}, {{wp|energy}}, and {{wp|healthcare}}. With an estimated $2.08 trillion in assets, it is the world's largest sovereign wealth fund and one of only two alongside the {{wp|Government Pension Fund of Norway}} to be valued at $1 trillion and above. Overall, its main aims include investing funds on behalf of the {{wp|British}} government, strengthening the {{wp|British}} economy, as well as preserving and enhancing the purchasing power of the {{wp|United Kingdom}}'s foreign reserves.


Established in 1976 during the premiership of {{wp|Edward Heath}}, whose notably long tenure coincided with an increase in oil prices particularly those in the nearby {{wp|North Sea}}, the organisation was initially based at {{wp|Tower 42}} in {{wp|London}}, where it remained for the next four decades, before eventually relocating in 2014 to {{wp|The Shard}}, also in {{wp|London}}, where it remains today. It is wholly owned by the {{wp|Government of the United Kingdom}} which manages it via {{wp|HM Treasury|Her Majesty's Treasury}}, its finance department, with the {{wp|Prime Minister of the United Kingdom}} serving as {{wp|chief executive officer}}.
Established in 1976 during the premiership of {{wp|Edward Heath}}, whose notably long tenure coincided with an increase in oil prices, particularly those in the nearby {{wp|North Sea}}, the organisation was initially based at {{wp|Tower 42}} in {{wp|London}}, where it remained for the next four decades, before eventually relocating in 2014 to {{wp|The Shard}}, also in {{wp|London}}, where it remains today. It is wholly owned by the {{wp|Government of the United Kingdom}} which manages it via {{wp|HM Treasury|Her Majesty's Treasury}}, its finance department, with the {{wp|Prime Minister of the United Kingdom}} serving as {{wp|chief executive officer}}.

Latest revision as of 14:53, 4 May 2024

Crown Heritage Investment Fund
CHIF
Sovereign wealth fund
FoundedJune 12, 1976; 47 years ago (1976-06-12)
Headquarters,
Key people
Keir Starmer (CEO)
Teddy Scott (Chairman)
AUM$2.089 trillion
OwnerGovernment of the United Kingdom
ParentHer Majesty's Treasury
SubsidiariesFinancial services: Barclays, HSBC, ING Group, Lloyds Banking Group, Standard Chartered
Automotive: Aston Martin, Lotus Cars, McLaren Group, Rolls-Royce Holdings, Volkswagen Group
Aviation: Air Canada, British Airways, KLM, Luxair, Qantas
Technology and innovation: Adyen, ASML Holding, ASOS, Prosus, Sage Group
Energy and utilities: BP, Philips, Shell, SSE
Healthcare and pharmaceuticals: ASML Holding, AstraZeneca, GlaxoSmithKline, Philips, Smith & Nephew
Food and agriculture: Compass Group, Diageo, Heineken, Unilever, Tesco
Creative industries: ITV, Just Eat Takeaway.com, RELX, Wolters Kluwer, WPP

The Crown Heritage Investment Fund (CHIF) is the sovereign wealth fund of the United Kingdom. Established by the British government in 1976 to initially manage the revenue generated by the North Sea oil, it has since expanded and diversified into various industries including finance, technology, energy, and healthcare. With an estimated $2.08 trillion in assets, it is the world's largest sovereign wealth fund and one of only two alongside the Government Pension Fund of Norway to be valued at $1 trillion and above. Overall, its main aims include investing funds on behalf of the British government, strengthening the British economy, as well as preserving and enhancing the purchasing power of the United Kingdom's foreign reserves.

Established in 1976 during the premiership of Edward Heath, whose notably long tenure coincided with an increase in oil prices, particularly those in the nearby North Sea, the organisation was initially based at Tower 42 in London, where it remained for the next four decades, before eventually relocating in 2014 to The Shard, also in London, where it remains today. It is wholly owned by the Government of the United Kingdom which manages it via Her Majesty's Treasury, its finance department, with the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom serving as chief executive officer.