National Post

Saudi investment freeze confined mostly to luxury hotels, small shareholdi­ngs.

STAKES CONFINED MOSTLY TO UPSCALE HOTELS, SMALL HOLDINGS IN SHARES

- Doug AlexAnDer in Toronto Bloomberg

The decision by Saudi Arabia to halt new investment­s and unload assets in Canada is likely to have limited impact, even as the kingdom’s foreign minister threatens further action.

Saudi assets in Canada are confined mainly to stakes in upscale hotel operators, some small stock holdings in companies like Canadian National Railway Co., and grain facilities.

Most investment­s have been made by Saudi billionair­e Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal through his Kingdom Holding Co., a Riyadh-based conglomera­te with investment­s in hotels, real estate and equities. The company’s internatio­nal hotel unit joined Bill Gates’s Cascade Investment and Canadian Isadore Sharp in a 2007 buyout of management company Four Seasons Hotels Inc., taking a 47.5-per-cent stake.

“The matter does not affect the day-to-day operations of Four Seasons,” spokeswoma­n Sarah Tuite said in an email. “It is business as usual as we continue to welcome guests to our hotels and resorts worldwide.”

Alwaleed’s influence in the kingdom has diminished after his arrest last year in an anti-corruption sweep by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who is seen to be sending a message to Western critics of his leadership with this latest reaction against Canada.

G3 Global Grain Group, a joint venture between state-owned Saudi Agricultur­e & Livestock Investment Co. and U.S. agri-food company Bunge Ltd., bought a 50.1-per-cent stake in the Canadian Wheat Board for $250 million in 2015. SALIC boosted its stake to 75 per cent a year later. The partnershi­p also holds an interest in a grain export terminal being built near Vancouver. On Tuesday, officials of the Winnipeg-based G3 said the company continues to buy and sell grain as usual. Officials didn’t immediatel­y return requests for comment on Wednesday.

Last year, Toronto-based technology startup QD Solar Inc. received funding from a group that included Saudi’s King Abdullah University of Science and Technology and Netherland­s-based venture capital firm DSM Venturing.

Saudi Arabia said Wednesday it’ll continue to ratchet up pressure on Canada for criticizin­g the recent arrests of women activists, with Foreign Minister Adel Al-Jubeir warning the next wave of retaliator­y steps could affect investment flows between the countries. Saudi Arabia’s central bank and pension funds have already begun selling Canadian assets, according to people familiar with the matter.

Saudi lender National Commercial Bank has an asset manager that held investment­s in 41 Canadian companies including Suncor Energy Inc., Canadian Natural Resources Ltd. and Canadian Pacific Railway Ltd. in its AlAhli North America Index Fund, according to May 2017 filings. CN Rail, at US$473,500, was the largest Canadian investment of the fund’s US$148.2-million portfolio.

Two-way trade between the two countries is tiny — around 0.4 per cent of Canada’s total trade in 2017. Canada exported $1.37 billion worth of goods to Saudi Arabia last year, mostly armoured fighting vehicles and their parts, according to Statistics Canada. The country imported $2.63 billion in goods from Saudi Arabia over that period, mostly crude imported to the Irving Oil Ltd. refinery in Saint John, N.B.

Saudi’s energy minister said Wednesday that the current “diplomatic crisis” with Canada will not impact relations between the stateowned Saudi Arabian Oil Co. and its customers in Canada.

The armoured vehicles are manufactur­ed by General Dynamics Land Systems Canada, based in London, Ont., a unit of U.S. defence giant General Dynamics

Corp., under a $15-billion contract with Saudi Arabia signed by the Canadian government in 2014.

Export Developmen­t Canada, the country’s trade financing agency, has exposure of about $2 billion to Saudi Arabia, and about 250 customers operating in the kingdom, spokeswoma­n Jessica Draker said in an email.

“Canada stands up firmly and respectful­ly for human rights,” Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told reporters Wednesday in Montreal, sidesteppi­ng questions on the impact of the Saudi moves. He also declined to say whether Canada would apologize for its statements about the women’s activists.

Amy Mills, a spokeswoma­n for Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland, said in an email the foreign ministry “continues to seek clarity from the Government of Saudi Arabia on various issues.”

Saudi Arabia’s move had a brief impact on the Canadian dollar, with the loonie depreciati­ng as much as 0.5 per cent to US$1.3120 on Wednesday after the Financial Times reported the Saudi Arabia central bank and state pension funds instructed overseas asset managers to dispose of Canadian assets.

Canada’s currency later reversed those losses, ending the day up 0.3 per cent. It was little changed in morning trading in Toronto on Thursday.

Saudi Arabian holdings of Canadian-dollar reserves are between $10 billion and $25 billion, with the upper end of that estimate representi­ng 10 per cent of daily Canadian dollar trading volume, according to estimates from Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce.

Canadian direct investors in Saudi Arabia, meanwhile, include Barrick Gold Corp., the world’s secondbigg­est producer by market value, and SNC-Lavalin Group Inc., Canada’s biggest engineerin­g and constructi­on company.

SNC, which has been operating in the kingdom for five decades, said late Wednesday it’s not yet been able to “fully assess” the impact of the tensions with Saudi Arabia on its business. SNC had revenue of about $993 million in the country last year, representi­ng about 11 per cent of total sales.

“If a widespread commercial embargo on Canadian commercial interests in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia were to be implemente­d on a prolonged basis, there will be an impact on our future financial performanc­e,” SNC said in a statement.

As for Barrick, the Toronto-based miner said it doesn’t expect its copper mine in Saudi Arabia to be affected by the escalating tensions with Canada.

 ?? STAN BEHAL / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES ?? The West Penthouse of the new Four Seasons Hotel and Private Residences Toronto under constructi­on in 2011. Four Seasons was bought out in 2007 by a consortium that included Saudi billionair­e Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal through his Kingdom Holding Co.
STAN BEHAL / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES The West Penthouse of the new Four Seasons Hotel and Private Residences Toronto under constructi­on in 2011. Four Seasons was bought out in 2007 by a consortium that included Saudi billionair­e Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal through his Kingdom Holding Co.

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