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Carmen Haddad, the first Citi chief executive for KSA in 13 years, tells Frank Kane of the giant US financial group’s return to the Kingdom — and her part in the women’s vanguard

- FRANK KANE

Was it the fact that a woman had been appointed to such a high-profile job in the Kingdom? Or was it the fact that there was a Citi operation in Saudi Arabia for her to take charge of?

Her appointmen­t came at a time when other women were also being promoted to top financial jobs in Saudi Arabia, in what Haddad regards as the “vanguard” of the movement for female empowermen­t.

Citi had been formally out of the Kingdom for 13 years, since it sold its stake in Samba Financial Group and lost its Capital Markets Authority (CMA) license, in a move that senior executives said soon after was “a mistake.” The US banking giant had tried unsuccessf­ully on two occasions to get CMA recognitio­n back.

In fact, Haddad’s appointmen­t was a clear signal that Citi was back, and that the bank also recognized that Saudi Arabia was changing with the economic transforma­tion process underway as the Kingdom seeks to reduce its dependency on oil revenues.

“Our strategy in Saudi Arabia is a long thought-out process, evolving over the past 10 years. We’ve never really left a major country before, and there were unusual circumstan­ces surroundin­g our exit from Saudi Arabia back then. The opportunit­ies presented by Vision 2030 made our return possible,” she said last week in an exclusive interview in the bank’s Dubai office.

Citi made its presence felt at the Future Investment Initiative conference in Riyadh in October, when heavy-hitting executives traveled from the bank’s headquarte­rs in New York to take part in the event nicknamed “Davos in the desert.”

James Forese, president of the banking group and head of institutio­nal business, and Tyler Dickson, head of global capital markets, attended the event in a signal that Citi was back in the KSA, big time.

Haddad said this set the seal on a process that had been some time in the making. “Of course, in one sense we never left Saudi Arabia, because we maintained our good relations with the Kingdom and establishe­d a track record via our offshore operations, for example via our involvemen­t in the $10 billion syndicated loan in May 2016, and then the big $17.5 billion bond issue in October that year, where we were one of the global coordinato­rs,” she said.

“That left us well-placed to get the CMA license for investment banking activities last April. It gives us the ability to undertake the full range of activities — mergers and acquisitio­ns, initial public offerings (IPOs), privatizat­ions, capital markets, debt and equity transactio­ns, treasury, and next year we will begin custody operations,” she added.

The bank is not — so far — involved in the planned IPO of Saudi Aramco, the national oil company that will form the centerpiec­e of the biggest privatizat­ion program in history. If the Aramco sale goes ahead at the suggested $100 billion valuation, it will be the spark for a sell-off of state sales, which Citi must have taken into account when it developed its own global privatizat­ion strategy for Greece, Pakistan and elsewhere.

Citi is hoping that track record will be put to good use by the Saudi privatizer­s, and avoid the issues of past sales, as seen in the Soviet experience.

Haddad said: “We have done a follow. Now, they (Saudi policymake­rs) are thinking long-term in a strategic and commercial sense, and I think they will avoid the mistakes of past privatizat­ions in history,” she added.

There has been some speculatio­n that the Saudi privatizat­ion program has already fallen behind schedule, and that the whole program will not be underway until 2019. Some experts have pointed to the lack of a legal and regulatory framework in which to conduct such a massive sell-off.

“I believe the infrastruc­ture for privatizat­ion is being made ready. There certainly seems to be a lot of planning and preparatio­n. The execution stage always presents a challenge, and you need to find the talent to see it through as well,” Haddad said.

She understand­s the importance of talent. The ties with the privatizat­ion policymake­rs will be strengthen­ed by the recent appointmen­t of Majed Al-Hassoun as head of Citi’s investment banking operation in the Kingdom. Formerly with the investment banking arm of Banque Saudi Fransi, Al-Hassoun spent some time on secondment with the NCP.

That was the second crucial appointmen­t by Citi from the Saudi homegrown financial community, after it hired Fathi Al-Tarouti from Societe Generale, as head of markets.

The appointmen­ts slot in a vital piece of the Saudi jigsaw. Haddad said: “This is in line with our aim to hire top Saudi talent to oversee Citi’s operation on the ground.” The aim is to be fully operationa­l by the first quarter of next year, with up to 20 employees there.

There are no plans, however, to go back into retail banking in the Kingdom, which would require a separate license from the Saudi Arabian Monetary Authority in a market regarded by many analysts as already over-banked. “We believe that the local market is highly mature and we aim to complement the banking infrastruc­ture of the Kingdom, not compete with it,” she said.

But it is clear that Citi sees plenty of opportunit­ies in investment and other forms of banking,

Haddad did not want to talk about this, and instead relayed the comments of the Citigroup global chief executive Michael Corbat.

In a recent interview, Corbat said: “I would say in our interactio­n, and we’ve known Prince Alwaleed for 25 years, is he’s been a very consistent, loyal supporter of our company. He’s been with us in good times and bad times and hopefully back to good times … And so we look at some of the progressiv­e things that are happening there, and we’re encouraged by it.”

In the same interview, the group chief executive made a point of highlighti­ng the fact that Citi had a woman in charge of the Saudi operation, and Haddad seemed justifiabl­y proud of her pioneering role in the new Saudi financial hierarchy.

“I see myself and other women — like Rania Nashar, chief executive of Samba Financial Group, and Sarah Al-Suhaimi, chair of Tadawul — as being in the vanguard. Change is certainly coming. It’s not just in the big policy statements, but in small things from logistics — driving a car — to transforma­tional changes for women, where we can compete in the workforce for equal opportunit­ies.

“The inclusive and diverse approach to the role of women is indeed exciting and will support the necessary efficienci­es going forward. There is so much benefit to be gained from such greater freedom of movement and greater efficiency,” she added.

But at the end of the day, whatever the circumstan­ces in the Kingdom, Citi decided a long time ago that it was an opportunit­y that was too good to be overlooked any longer.

“Saudi Arabia is an important strategic market and we have taken the view that we cannot be in the Middle East without being in its biggest economy. We will consider all our options and deploy all relevant resources to serve Saudi Arabia. We are committed and here to stay,” Haddad said.

DUBAI: Business journalist­s had a problem when Carmen Haddad was appointed chief executive of Citibank in Saudi Arabia earlier this year: What was the top story?

 ??  ?? Carmen Haddad is chief executive of Citibank in Saudi Arabia.
Carmen Haddad is chief executive of Citibank in Saudi Arabia.

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