Nobel prize foundation frets over its finances

STOCKHOLM (Reuters) – The Nobel Foundation might   have to reduce the money it awards winners of its prestigous  prizes due to the effects of the global financial crisis, its  director said yesterday.

The foundation will give 10 million Swedish crowns ($1.5  million) for each prize this year as it has done for most of the  last decade. But the downturn could strain resources for future  prizes.

“It might be in the future we would be forced to lower the  prize,” Michael Sohlman, Executive Director for the Nobel  Foundation, told a press briefing. “We have sailed the storm,  but have taken on some water.”

Sohlman said the value of the foundation’s assets had only  recovered somewhat in 2009 after it lost nearly one-fifth of its  invested capital last year due to the financial crisis.

Prizes for the sciences and for peace were established in  the will of 19th century dynamite tycoon Alfred Nobel and have  been handed out since 1901.

Nobel stipulated that 31 million crowns ($4.5 million)  should be invested in safe securities, the income from which  would be distributed annually in the form of prizes. The value  of the invested capital at the end of December last year was 2.8  billion crowns ($407.2 million).

The total cost for this year’s Nobels — some 120 million  crowns ($17.5 million) — covers everything from the cash awards  to a lavish banquet in Stockholm and a ceremony in Oslo where  US President Barack Obama will be awarded the Peace Prize.

The value of the prize has been steady or increased every  year since 1950, according to the foundation’s website. No  prizes were awarded during World War I or World War II.