Arab Times

Saudi reforms promise FDI glut next yr

One-year interest rate swap rate falls below US rate

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DUBAI, April 19, (RTRS): Saudi Arabia’s inclusion in global equity indexes and the planned privatisat­ion of oil company Aramco are expected to bring big inflows of overseas money into the kingdom next year.

This should help Riyadh rebuild its financial reserves and fund investment plans after the 2014 plunge in oil prices that cut export earnings and deprived the banking system of funds.

Reversing the trend would shift the outlook for an economy which shrank last year for the first time in nearly a decade.

The interest rate swaps market, which bankers use to hedge against future fluctuatio­ns in money flows, has begun to reflect these expectatio­ns in recent weeks.

The one-year riyal IRS has sunk below the one-year US dollar IRS for the first time since the global financial crisis at the start of this decade - a bet that the Saudi money market will be flush with funds in 12 months’ time.

Issue

“It’s quite a change — before, the issue was a shortage of liquidity. We now face a situation in which we’re about to have too much liquidity,” said Hans-Peter Huber, chief investment officer at Riyad Capital, a top Saudi investment bank.

“Massive inflows are to be expected over the next two years.”

The one-year IRS spread was a negative 12 basis points on Thursday. Before the oil price plunge, the spread hovered around plus 60 bps, and it soared to a peak of 203 bps in 2016 during Saudi Arabia’s liquidity crunch.

The inflows are likely to boost foreign reserves. The central bank’s net foreign assets have slid to $480 billion from a peak of $737 billion in August 2014, raising concern about Riyadh’s long-term ability to support its currency.

Ehsan Khoman, head of regional research for Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ, said they could rebound by $3040 billion before the end of 2019.

Capital inflows may also supply enough money in the banking system to support a pick-up of private investment and a gradual economic recovery

in the next few years.

“The worst is probably behind us in terms of economic activity,” said Garbis Iradian, chief Middle East economist for the Institute of Internatio­nal Finance, a global financial industry associatio­n.

Aramco

Officials predict the sale of a 5 percent stake in Saudi Aramco will raise $100 billion. It was planned for late 2018 but after delays in preparatio­ns, bankers now expect early 2019.

Meanwhile, MSCI is expected to decide to add Saudi Arabia to its emerging market index in June, with the change taking effect in stages from next year. FTSE Russell decided last month to upgrade Riyadh to emerging market status.

This will attract portfolio funds. Saudi Arabia could see $30-45 billion of portfolio inflows in the next two years

if it reaches the same level of foreign ownership in stock markets as the United Arab Emirates and Qatar, according to investment bank EFG Hermes.

This month Riyadh took another step towards boosting fund inflows by listing $54.5 billion worth of local currency government bonds on its stock exchange. That makes it easier for overseas investors to buy and trade them.

In addition to Aramco, Riyadh has slated dozens of enterprise­s and assets for privatisat­ion in the next few years, aiming to raise $200 billion. Bureaucrac­y and legal uncertaint­ies have stalled the programme, but it may start to move ahead later this year.

Khoman estimated privatisat­ions other than Aramco could create a total $30-35 billion of capital inflows in the next five years, assuming necessary legal changes were made such as lifting

ownership ceilings on non-listed entities.

Foreign direct investment in industries which Riyadh is just starting to develop, such as tourism, technology, logistics and infrastruc­ture, could also become significan­t. Khoman said inward FDI flows, $7.4 billion in 2016, could at least double in the next few years.

Risks

There are risks to the outlook. The most recent forecasts for the Saudi economy assume Brent oil, now at $74 a barrel, will average at least $60 this year. If it drops much below that level, the government might have to resume drawing down foreign reserves heavily to pay its bills.

This could scare away some foreign investment and perhaps cause Riyadh to further postpone the Aramco sale.

Many analysts think Aramco

is

more likely to raise $50-75 billion, significan­tly lower than the government’s $100 billion estimate.

Foreign investors are expected to buy most of the stake, but it is unclear how much of their money will be added to foreign reserves. More than half may be allocated to the Public Investment Fund, Riyadh’s top sovereign fund, for reinvestme­nt abroad, Iradian said.

One wild card is the money which private Saudi citizens transfer abroad; if this increases because of political or economic instabilit­y, it could offset much of the fund inflows. Bank for Internatio­nal Settlement­s data shows private Saudi deposits at banks abroad jumped $18 billion in 2017.

“The November 2017 crackdown on alleged corruption among the kingdom’s elite may have accelerate­d the pace of capital outflows,” Iradian said.

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