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PRINCE ALWALEED HAS AMBITIONS FOR HIS KINGDOM

▶ Saudi Arabian billionair­e is looking for investment­s as large as $3 billion and to possibly spin off his company

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Saudi Arabia’s Prince Alwaleed bin Talal is looking for deals again to reshape his investment empire, just weeks after his release from detention in Riyadh’s Ritz-Carlton.

The prince, in his first interview since leaving the hotel seven weeks ago, said he was working with advisers including Goldman Sachs to find investment­s as large as $3 billion for Kingdom Holding Company, his publicly traded investment firm. He also said he was likely to split the company’s $13bn of assets through a spin-off of its domestic property and other holdings.

“It will take some time as we are still developing that matter,” the 63-year-old nephew of King Salman said at his Riyadh apartment. “Our CEO is thinking in these terms.”

Prince Alwaleed was the most prominent among hundreds of Saudi businessme­n, government officials and princes who were swept up in November in what the government called a crackdown on corruption.

Ranked the world’s 64th richest man and long the public face of the Saudi royal family to foreign executives and investors, Prince Alwaleed made clear he wants to reassure partners that his business empire is intact and fully functionin­g after 83 days of confinemen­t in the Ritz-Carlton. “I understand it’s not going to be easy at all – some people in the business community will be doubtful, will say, ‘What’s going on?’,” Prince Alwaleed said.

“However, I assure them that everything is normal and we are functionin­g as we were before and we welcome them to come here to see what we’re doing in Saudi Arabia and life is back to normal.”

While the prince refused to provide the terms of his release, he described a “confirmed understand­ing” with Saudi authoritie­s.

Signing the document left him free to function normally with “zero guilt” and “zero conditions”.

Prince Alwaleed gained internatio­nal fame in the 1990s as a savvy investor and occasional­ly drew comparison­s to Warren Buffett.

Kingdom Holding’s current investment­s include stakes in Citigroup, Four Seasons Hotels & Resorts and Twitter.

Its domestic holdings, most notably a kilometre-high tower under constructi­on in the Red Sea city of Jeddah, make up about half of Kingdom Holding’s assets. Prince Alwaleed said they could be spun off into a real estate investment trust.

In the meantime, Kingdom Holding is seeking to raise $1bn to $2bn in debt. Prince Alwaleed described that as “firepower” for local, regional or internatio­nal investment­s of $1bn to $3bn.

“Right now we are in discussion­s with certain companies in the US for certain deals,” the prince said. “Although the market right now in the US is – I’d not say overvalued, but prices are not where we would wish them to be.”

Kingdom Holding shares, which trade on Saudi Arabia’s Tadawul exchange, have slumped 12 per cent since Prince Alwaleed’s November 4 detention, giving the company a market capitalisa­tion of about $9bn. The prince holds a 95 per cent stake.

Saudi Arabia freed Prince Alwaleed and several of the country’s businessme­n from detention in late January, clearing out the Ritz-Carlton hotel.

In part because the government never confirmed the names of those detained or revealed the charges against them, the round-up raised concerns among foreign investors about transparen­cy in the Saudi legal system. Prince Alwaleed denied that detainees were treated badly during their time in the Ritz-Carlton.

“Actually, I was given the best service,” he said. “Doctors used to come twice a day. We had the best service, best food, best everything.”

Like Prince Alwaleed, many of those who were released are returning to their lives and business as normal. Former finance minister and minister of state Ibrahim Al Assaf led Saudi Arabia’s delegation to the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d in January.

“It’s business as usual,” Prince Alwaleed said. “We are going to continue investing in Saudi Arabia. I was born in Saudi Arabia, I will die in Saudi Arabia.”

I assure them that everything is normal and we are functionin­g as we were before ... life is back to normal

PRINCE ALWALEED

 ?? Bloomberg Television ?? Prince Alwaleed bin Talal is back in action after being released from the Ritz-Carlton
Bloomberg Television Prince Alwaleed bin Talal is back in action after being released from the Ritz-Carlton

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