Arab Times

Qatar fund not liquidatin­g assets to help banks: CEO

QIA’s investment­s in US are stable and strong: Sheikh Abdullah

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DUBAI, April 17, (RTRS): Qatar’s sovereign wealth fund has not been liquidatin­g foreign assets to support the Gulf state’s banking system since other Arab countries imposed an embargo on Qatar last June, according to the fund’s chief executive.

The embargo caused heavy outflows of deposits from Qatari banks in the initial months, and central bank data shows government bodies protected the banks by depositing about $30 billion in them between June and December.

Outflows have now essentiall­y ceased, removing the need for a government support operation, but bankers said much or most of the emergency deposits in banks last year came from the QIA.

However, Sheikh Abdullah bin Mohamed bin Saud al-Thani, who runs the Qatar Investment Authority (QIA), said the fund, with assets unofficial­ly estimated at about $300 billion, did not need to sell foreign assets to raise cash, and indeed was about to announce “the deal of a lifetime”.

“How can I liquidate assets — as they speculate — and at the same time I keep buying others,” he was quoted as telling the Lusail newspaper.

“Two days ago, we signed a deal in Miami and we will announce it in the next few days,” he added without elaboratin­g.

Sheikh Abdullah said the QIA had a privileged position in global markets and would keep investing around the world.

He was speaking in the United States as he accompanie­d Qatari Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani, who visited President Donald Trump last week. Sheikh Tamim returned to Doha on Saturday.

The QIA’s investment­s in the United States are stable and strong, and it has so far spent $35 billion executing about 60 percent of its US investment plans for the period 20152020, Sheikh Abdullah added.

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