The Norwegian economy, measured by the FNI index, is recovering well after the oil downturn, with growth rates above average also in October. After a slight slowdown in September, the FNI index is now at levels just above the numbers we saw in July and August.

The FNI-index has been updated for October
The FNI (Financial News Index) index, that is constructed by Retriever and the CAMP-centre at BI Norwegian Business School was last updated on October 31, this year. Overall, the FNI-index signals that the growth observed in the third quarter increases in October. After a slight slowdown in September, the FNI index is now at levels just above the numbers we saw in July and August.
Thus, the Norwegian economy, measured by FNI, is recovering well after the oil downturn, with growth rates above average also in October. The most prominent topics that contribute to increase the index are IT, technology and startup, while topics such as retail, monetary policy and oil service still contribute to pull the FNI-index slightly down.
About the FNI index
Retriever and Centre for Applied Macro and Petroleum economics (CAMP) at BI Norwegian Business School have started a collaboration to construct a business cycle indicator for the Norwegian economy. The new index, called FNI (Financial News Index), measures the development of the Norwegian economy on a daily basis, and will be published monthly. The FNI-index is constructed based on daily news articles, from many sources. The news will be decomposed into different topics. These will, together with GDP, be used to construct a daily business cycle index. The central idea behind the index is simple: To the extent that newspapers provide a relevant description of the economy, the more intensive a given topic is represented in the newspaper at a given point in time, the more likely it is that this topic represents something of importance for the economy's current and future needs and developments.
The average value of the FNI-index is zero. Progressively bigger positive values indicate progressively better-than-average business cycle conditions. Conversely, progressively more negative values indicate progressively worse-than-average conditions.
For more information, see here: https://www.retriever-info.com/fni/
The next FNI update is Wednesday, December 6, 2017.
Contact/press
Professor Hilde C. Bjørnland, BI Norwegian Business School, +47 464 10 767
Country manager Espen Viskjer, Retriever +47 915 52 765
Published: 2017.11.08
Hilde C. Bjørnland is appointed External Member on the Committee of Monetary Policy and Financial Stability at the Norwegian Central Bank, 2026-29.
Hilde C. Bjørnland receives Research Award 2025 from BI Norwegian Business School.
The paper "Unveiling Inflation: Oil Shocks, Supply Chain Pressures, and Expectations" (coauthors Knut Are Aastveit, Jamie L. Cross and Helene O. Kalstad) is accepted for publication in European Economic Review
Program for the conference "Applied Macroeconomics in a Changing World", jointly organized by Bank of Canada, the Banca d’Italia, and CAMP in Oslo on September 11-12, 2025