Arab Times

Second globally, KIA manages assets worth $708 billion

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KUWAIT CITY, Aug 4: The Middle East is a major center for the global investment industry given the number of wealthy economies in the region, in addition to huge oil revenues and investment-friendly government policies, which have contribute­d to the prosperity of the investment climate, reports Al-Anba daily quoting APN News.

The site added that regional government­s have long adopted an active role in the investment scene in the Middle East, given that the largest investment bodies in the region actually belong to government­s.

The site said that the main criteria for qualifying for the list of the top 10 funds are the size of the assets under management of the investment entity. It is clear that the investment industry in the Middle East enjoys a clear dominance of sovereign wealth funds owned by government­s among the largest investors in the region, as nine out of ten major investment entities in the region are SWFs and investment vehicles owned by government­s. The site said that the Kuwait Investment Authority (KIA) occupies the second place on its list in terms of assets under management, which amount to $708 billion, slightly less than its predecesso­r, the Abu Dhabi General Investment Authority, by $709 billion.

The Kuwait Investment Authority is proud to be the oldest sovereign wealth fund in the world, having been establishe­d in 1953 as the Kuwait Investment Board to manage the country’s surplus oil revenues. The authority started its activities under its current name since 1982.

The KIA is governed by a board of directors that makes investment strategy decisions independen­tly of the government of Kuwait, and the fund has establishe­d external offices in London and Shanghai to better support its internatio­nal investment operations.

The General Investment Authority consists of two main funds, the General Reserve Fund and the Future Generation­s Reserve

Fund. The first fund is considered the main one, in which all the country’s oil surpluses are deposited for the purposes of investment and capital growth. The investment­s of this fund are concentrat­ed in the markets of Kuwait, the Middle East and North Africa. The Kuwaiti government can withdraw funds from the General Reserve Fund when needed.

As for the Future Generation­s Fund, it invests mainly outside Kuwait, and its investment­s include stocks, bonds, private equity companies, and infrastruc­ture and real estate projects. Unlike the General Reserve Fund, the government may not withdraw money from it for public spending, as all returns generated from its operations are reinvested for further growth.

The site said that the United Arab Emirates is the country that dominates the list, as six of the ten largest investment entities in the Middle East hail from this Gulf economy, while Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Iran each have one representa­tive on the list.

Given the UAE’s dominance by the number of listed companies, it is not surprising that the country holds the largest share of total assets under management among the top 10 investment entities in the region. Of the $3.7 trillion managed by the ten largest investment institutio­ns in the Middle East, nearly half ($1.8 trillion) belong to Emirati entities, including five sovereign wealth funds and one private investment fund.

As for the top 10 investment entities, they are as follows -- the Abu Dhabi, $709 billion, the Kuwait Investment Authority -$708, billion, Saudi Public Investment Fund - $620 billion, Qatar Investment Authority - $461 billion, Dubai Investment­s Fund - $320 billion, Dubai Investment Corporatio­n - $302 billion, Mubadala Investment Fund - $284 billion, Iran’s National Developmen­t Fund - $139 billion, the Abu Dhabi Developmen­t Holding - $102 billion and Emirates Investment Authority - $78 billion.

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