Arab Times

Saudi state investment fund to set up new companies

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RIYADH, July 23, (RTRS): Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF) aims to establish companies in areas including housing, petrochemi­cals and technology as it expands its investment­s locally and overseas, Finance Minister Ibrahim al-Assaf said.

His statement, quoted on Wednesday by the al-Sharq al-Awsat newspaper, was a fresh sign that Saudi authoritie­s plan to use government-owned funds more actively to support economic reforms and developmen­t.

An analyst at EFG Hermes forecast Wataniya would make a quarterly profit of 20.19 million dinars.

The decline in profit came despite a year-on-year increase in the second-quarter in revenue — which grew 4.2 percent to 196.7 million dinars — and subscriber­s — whose numbers climbed to

The PIF was establishe­d in 1971 to help finance strategic economic projects. It has assets under management worth about $5.3 billion, according to the Sovereign Wealth Fund institute, which tracks state-run funds. At a meeting on Monday, the cabinet authorised the PIF to establish companies inside and outside the kingdom, alone or in partnershi­p with other institutio­ns from the public or private sectors.

“This decision aims at...giving the fund more flexibilit­y and enabling it to expand investment activity locally and overseas,” 21.6 million from 19.6 million at the end of June 2013.

But the revenue growth hid discrepanc­ies, as while earnings in Algeria grew 22.8 percent in the first half of the year, it fell away in Tunisia (down 5.3 percent), the Palestinia­n Territorie­s (down 4.1 percent) and in Kuwait (down 19.1 percent). al-Assaf was quoted as saying.

He added, “The fund has initiative­s to establish companies working in the petrochemi­cal, housing, housing finance and technology sectors.” Previously, the PIF had to obtain cabinet approval for individual projects, a lengthy process.

In March, the cabinet gave permission for the PIF, state oil firm Saudi Aramco and petrochemi­cal giant Saudi Basic Industries Corp to establish an industrial investment company with capital of 2 billion riyals ($530 million). It did not provide a quarterly breakdown.

Oman’s No.2 telecom operator, Nawras, reported a 32 percent jump in second-quarter profit as it made more money from both its fixed line and mobile data operations.

The firm made a net profit of 9.9 million rials ($25.7 million) in the three

Saudi economist Abdulwahab Abu Dahesh said the cabinet’s decision this week indicated the government wanted to encourage the private sector to participat­e in big developmen­t projects, since government institutio­ns were having trouble managing them alone.

Last month the Shura council, an advisory body to the government, debated a proposal to set up a Saudi Arabian sovereign wealth fund, which could mean more active management of the kingdom’s budget surpluses. It did not reach a conclusion. months to June 30, up from 7.51 million rials in the year-earlier period, it said in a bourse filing in Oman.

Nawras had reported declining profits in eight of the previous 10 quarters.

A Gulf Baader Capital Markets analyst forecast Nawras would make a quarterly profit of 9.20 million rials.

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