Kuwait Times

Saudi wealth fund aims to double size by 2020

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RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s main sovereign wealth fund wants to increase its financial clout to 1.5 trillion riyals ($400 billion) by 2020 as part of the kingdom’s efforts to boost privatesec­tor growth and wean itself off oil export dependence. The assets-under-management goal, laid out by the Public Investment Fund (PIF) on Wednesday, came on the second day of an internatio­nal conference in Riyadh. It was accompanie­d by publicatio­n of PIF’s first comprehens­ive business program, outlining targets for investment­s and returns for 2018-2020.

PIF, which is expected to receive proceeds from the planned sale of 5 percent of state oil company Saudi Aramco’s shares, has currently around $230 billion worth of assets under management.

It plans to create 20,000 direct domestic jobs, and 256,000 constructi­on jobs by 2020. This will increase PIF’s contributi­on to Saudi Arabia’s gross domestic product from 4.4 percent to 6.3 percent, it said in a statement yesterday. Investment­s will be in sectors such as real estate and infrastruc­ture as well as in new areas of activity in the Saudi economy through the establishm­ent of companies such as the Saudi Arabian Military Industries company and the Saudi Real Estate Refinancin­g Company.

One of the biggest tasks facings PIF will be the delivery of a $500 billion plan to build a business and industrial zone extending into Jordan and Egypt, announced at the start of the conference on Tuesday.

PIF also set a new target to increase total shareholde­r return to 4-5 percent between now and 2020 from 3 percent, it said yesterday.

“The PIF Program represents a vital milestone as we work towards realizing Vision 2030,” Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman Al-Saud, the economic reform plan’s architect, said in a statement.

The 96-page program said PIF will structure its investment­s in six areas: Saudi equity holdings, sector developmen­t, real estate and infrastruc­ture, mega projects, internatio­nal strategic investment­s and a “diversifie­d pool” across global asset classes. It said “long-term” average annual return from these areas would be between 6.5 to 9 percent. Outside of Saudi Arabia, PIF’s investment­s will be in a number of assets such as fixed-income, public equity, private equity and debt, real estate, infrastruc­ture and alternativ­e investment­s such as hedge funds, the fund said. PIF Managing Director Yasir Al-Rumayyan said the fund was open to investing in more big ticket items such as US ride services company Uber. It also outlined its four major sources of funding to include capital injections from the government, government asset transfers, loans and debt instrument­s as well as retained earnings from investment­s. — Reuters

 ?? —AFP ?? RIYADH: Participan­ts watch a movie advertisin­g Saudi’s Red Sea project on the sidelines of the three-day Future Investment Initiative­s conference in Riyadh yesterday.
—AFP RIYADH: Participan­ts watch a movie advertisin­g Saudi’s Red Sea project on the sidelines of the three-day Future Investment Initiative­s conference in Riyadh yesterday.

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