The National - News

UAE ENJOYS 8% RISE IN FDI AMID GLOBAL DECLINES

Foreign direct investment fell by 23% to $1.43tn worldwide in 2017

- JENNIFER GNANA

The UAE’s foreign direct investment inflow grew by around 8 per cent last year over 2016 to reach $10.86bn amid declining inward investment across the West Asia region, the United Nation’s Trade and Developmen­t body said in a report.

“FDI to six countries [Bahrain, Jordan, Lebanon, Oman, Qatar, and the UAE] rose but not sufficient­ly to help the subregion overcome the decline,” said the latest World Investment Report, which tracks flows and stocks, mergers and acquisitio­ns globally.

Flow of FDI into the UAE was bolstered by “rising cross-border M&A sales”, the report said.

The region’s overall activity declined by around $5bn to reach $25.5bn in 2017. The fall in FDI flows to the region mirrors internatio­nal trends. Global FDI fell by 23 per cent to $1.43tn last year, which the UN body handling trade, investment and developmen­t said was a result of a correspond­ing 22 per cent decline in cross-border mergers and acquisitio­ns.

The decline in FDI activity during this period came after inflated transactio­n volumes due to large one-off deals and corporate restructur­ings in 2016. Prospects for growth in FDI in the near future remain bleak with announced greenfield investment declining by 14 per cent, the report added.

The UAE, one of the better performers in the region had outflows of FDI growing at a similar pace to inflows to reach around $14bn in 2017.

The country announced last month that it would allow 100 per cent foreign ownership in businesses outside free zones in an effort to incentivis­e more FDI into the country.

Saudi Arabia, the region’s largest economy and biggest foreign investment recipient, saw FDI inflows slide by four-fifths in 2017 over the previous year to $1.42bn. The WIR suggested it was due to “significan­t divestment­s and negative intracompa­ny loans by foreign MNEs [multinatio­nal enterprise­s].”

Unctad cited Anglo-Dutch oil major Shell’s sale of its 50 per cent interest in its Sadaf petrochemi­cals joint venture to Saudi Arabia’s Sabic for $820 million as an example of such divestment­s.

Saudi Arabia’s share in total FDI inflows to West Asia collapsed from 53 per cent in 2009 to 27 per cent in 2015 and a mere 6 per cent in 2017, the report said. Its outflows also shrunk by around $3bn to reach $5.6bn during the same period.

FDI to Kuwait. the smallest beneficiar­y of foreign direct investment among the GCC states, shrunk by around $118m to reach $301m, while Oman and Bahrain received new inflows of $196m and $276m, which raised the total value of FDI to $1.86bn and $519m, respective­ly.

Jordan also received an incrementa­l boost of 7 per cent, around $100m, to take FDI inflows to $1.66bn in 2017. Iraq, the region’s second-largest oil producer and which has seen capital flight during its battle with ISIS, saw its losses slow by around $1bn to $5bn from the estimated $6bn that exited the country in 2016.

The WIR said FDI activity in Turkey contracted due to political instabilit­y, which prompted downgrades of its sovereign ratings. FDI inflows dropped by $2bn to reach $10.8bn in 2017.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates