The Mormon Church's Secretive $100 Billion Fund Made A Killing On GameStop Then Upped Its Tesla Stake By 39%

By on May 25, 2021 in ArticlesEntertainment

The infamous GameStop short squeeze continues to produce fascinating and unusual financial anecdotes. Today's comes courtesy of the Mormon Church. Ensign Peak Advisors manages a secretive tax-exempt $100 billion fund for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. The fund, which is intended for the second coming of Christ, collects about $7 billion each year from its members as Mormons are asked to contribute 10% of their annual income to the church. Roughly $6 billion of that amount is used to cover annual operating costs. The remaining $1 billion in transferred to Ensign to put into the investment portfolio. The fund has grown in value from $12 billion in 1997 (when Ensign was formed) to $100 billion today. And somehow Ensign was a huge winner in the GameStop insanity!?!

According to recently released regulatory findings, the Mormon Church's GameStop investment racked up a 900% gain last quarter.

Ensign bought 46,000 shares of GameStop in the fourth quarter of 2020 when shares were trading between $10 and $20. That stake grew from being worth just under $900,000 to $8.7 million in the first three months of 2021 as the price surged to $190.

When it was all said and done, GameStop moved up from bring Ensign's 1,452nd most valuable holding to 455 on the list.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, historic Mormon Salt Lake Temple is shown here with Christmas light display o

(Photo by George Frey/Getty Images)

Ensign also got in on the Tesla craze. Over the last year, Ensign increased its stake in Tesla by 3,500% to 467,000 shares. In the last quarter, it increased its stake by another 39% to 650,000 shares. Ensign's Tesla stake is its 15th biggest holding – worth $433 million as of the end of March.

Ensign also has a $2 billion stake in both Apple and Microsoft and more than $1 billion stakes in Amazon and Alphabet.

Ensign, as an arm of the Mormon Church, is technically a nonprofit. Nonprofit organizations are exempted in the U.S. from paying taxes on their income. Religious groups are considered nonprofits. However, the exemption is not without requirements and the LDS must operate exclusively for religious, educational, or other charitable purposes.

Did we make a mistake?
Submit a correction suggestion and help us fix it!
Submit a Correction