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Saudi Arabia expands overseas investment­s

Kingdom seeks to diversify revenue from oil

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DUBAI: Saudi Arabia plans to expand its sovereign wealth fund into the world’s largest. The kingdom took a huge step toward that goal on Saturday when it signed billions of dollars of deals with Blackstone Group LP and SoftBank Group Corp.

The Public Investment Fund, or PIF, is at the centre of Saudi Arabia’s efforts to diversify revenue away from oil under an economic transforma­tion plan known as Vision 2030.

The fund could eventually control more than US$2 trillion, according to Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

The sale of a less than 5% stake in oil giant Aramco to the public will provide funds for investment.

“We want to be an investment powerhouse,” PIF managing director Yasir Alrumayyan said in a rare public appearance last Saturday during an event that gathered top Saudi officials and American corporate titans, including JPMorgan Chase & Co chief executive officer Jamie Dimon and Citigroup Inc CEO Mike Corbat, in Riyadh.

“Most of the investment­s we announced and will announce soon are internatio­nal, but they will be in parallel with our investment­s in Saudi.”

The PIF’s dealmaking has quickened this year as it seeks to increase the proportion of foreign holdings to 50% from 5 percent, excluding Aramco.

Here’s some of the ments so far:

> Blackstone infrastruc­ture fund

The PIF agreed to commit US$20bil to an infrastruc­ture investment fund with Blackstone, the world’s biggest private-equity manager.

Blackstone plans to raise the same amount from other investors and with leverage, the New York-based asset manager expects to have more than US$100bil in purchasing power for infrastruc­ture projects, primarily in the US.

The agreement is non-binding and terms are still being negotiated.

The potential investment reflects the PIF’s fund’s biggest invest- “positive views around the ambitious infrastruc­ture initiative­s being undertaken in the United States as announced by President Trump,” and will allow the PIF to “achieve long-term returns given historical investment shortfalls,” Alrumayyan said.

> SoftBank vision fund

Saudi Arabia and SoftBank formally announced the first close of fundraisin­g for the largest-ever technology investment fund last Saturday.

More than US$93bil has been secured from backers led by the PIF and the Japanese company, and the fund could grow to US$100bil.

The PIF didn’t disclose the size of its investment, but bin Salman agreed to potentiall­y invest up to US$45bil in the fund over five years after a meeting with SoftBank’s Masayoshi Son, Apple Inc, Qualcomm Inc, Foxconn Technology Group and Sharp Corp also put in capital.

“We are building a portfolio that is diversifie­d across sectors, asset classes and geographie­s, and expect the Vision Fund to act as a platform to access a range of exciting, emerging opportunit­ies in the technology sector,” Alrumayyan said in a statement announcing the deal.

> Uber Technologi­es Inc

The PIF invested US$3.5bil in US ride-hailing company Uber Technologi­es Inc last June, marking its arrival as a major global investor. The deal valued Uber at US$62.5bil and gave Alrumayyan a board seat at the San Franciscob­ased company.

> Saudi Arabian military industries

The PIF earlier this month set up a defence company – Saudi Arabian Military Industries, or SAMI – to help reduce the kingdom’s reliance on foreign purchases of military equipment and create a domestic manufactur­ing industry.

The wealth fund said SAMI will directly contribute around 14 billion riyals (US$3.7bil) to the Saudi economy by 2030, invest more than 6 billion riyals in research and developmen­t and create over 40,000 jobs in the engi- neering and technical fields.

“SAMI is a big thing,” Alrumayyan said. “We are the third-largest spender on military in the world so by 2030 we want to bring in 50 percent of our procuremen­t into Saudi Arabia.”

> Mohamed Alabbar

The PIF was among investors contributi­ng to start Middle East e-commerce venture Noon last November.

Led by Dubai-based business tycoon Mohamed Alabbar, the fund pledged to invest US$500mil – half of Noon’s capital – and will be an active participan­t in its board.

The Saudi fund deepened ties with Alabbar, who is also chairman of Dubai’s largest real estate developer Emaar Properties PJSC, later that month when it took a 50% stake in his investment vehicle Adeptio AD Investment­s SPC Ltd. Adeptio bought Kuwait Food Co, which operates KFC and Pizza Hut restaurant­s in the Middle East and North Africa.

> Posco

The PIF’s investment in Korea’s Posco Engineerin­g & Constructi­on Co. was one of the fund’s first overseas deals.

The fund paid US$1.1bil for a 38% stake and got the right to appoint two board members.

>At home

Domestical­ly, the PIF has assets worth about US$106bil, including stakes in companies such as Saudi Basic Industries Corp, the world’s second-biggest chemicals manufactur­er, and National Commercial Bank, the kingdom’s largest lender. The government also plans to transfer ownership of many state assets to the fund while they are being privatised, including the Saudi stock exchange and flour mills.

The PIF is the main investor in a planned 334-sq km sports and entertainm­ent city that will be built south of Riyadh, the government said in April.

The plans will include a safari area and a Six Flags Entertainm­ent Corp theme park. – Bloomberg

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