Japan's public pension fund, the biggest of its kind in the world, said Friday it lost more than $135 billion in a record quarterly loss caused by a global stocks rout. The Government Pension Investment Fund said its losses in the October-December period totalled 9.1 percent, or 14.8 trillion yen ($135.8 billion).
Global shares plunged toward the end of last year, as US politicians moved toward an eventual government shutdown and Washington's trade war with Beijing intensified, worrying investors. "During the October-December quarter, due to concerns over uncertain global economic and corporate outlook, global investors' risk aversion heightened and domestic and international stocks fell sharply," fund president Norihiro Takahashi said in a statement. He added, however, that the fund was a long-term investor and makes on average 2.73-percent profit a year. The Japanese fund is worth more than 150 trillion yen.
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