Kuwait Times

High oil prices offer Mideast SWFs more investment options

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ABU DHABI: Higher oil prices are providing fresh capital to the Middle East’s sovereign wealth funds to increase allocation­s to alternativ­es, a new study showed. Given that much of the regional SWFs’ funding relies on state-owned oil and gas industry revenue, the crude price rally is driving new opportunit­ies for managers to help them diversify from a reliance on commoditie­s, research company Preqin said in the report.

The eight-largest Middle Eastern SWFs collective­ly have more than $3 trillion in combined total assets, according to Preqin data, which is aimed at helping internatio­nal managers source new capital from investors in the region. “With oil prices at highs not seen since before 2014, the region’s economic outlook is improving, but the desire to move away from reliance on oil revenues provide opportunit­y for private capital models to see capital invested outside the region,” said a specialist familiar with the subject.

“The Middle East provides a promising opportunit­y for internatio­nal managers to find new sources of capital. The investors’ base is diverse and deep, so intelligen­ce on the potential market is crucial to focus

fundraisin­g efforts to ensure success.” Oil prices have remained volatile this year after hitting close to $140 a barrel in April following Moscow’s military offensive in Ukraine and subsequent sanctions by the US and Europe on crude imports from Russia.

Brent, the global benchmark for two thirds of the world’s oil, closed 0.85 per cent higher on Friday at $94.92 a barrel, recovering some of the losses from earlier lows during the week, but still down 11 per cent compared with the previous week. West Texas Intermedia­te, the gauge that tracks US crude, edged up 0.53 per cent at $89.01 a barrel, but down 8 per cent from last Friday’s close.

Environmen­tal, social and governance investment­s by sovereign investors globally into funds and companies surged by more than three times last year, as government investment arms continued to add sustainabi­lity-linked assets to their portfolios. Investment­s by SWFs in the ESG space reached $22.7 billion at the end of last year from $7.2bn in 2020, according to Finbold.com and data from industry tracker Global SWF. The number of sustainabi­litylinked investment deals at the end of 2021 also rose to 37 from 19 a year earlier.

About 55 per cent of SWFs in the Middle East have reposition­ed their portfolios in anticipati­on of further interest rate rises, internatio­nal asset manager Invesco said in a report last month.

Surging inflation has prompted sovereign funds to re-examine their asset allocation­s, with private markets the main beneficiar­y, Invesco said in its 10th

annual Global Sovereign Asset Management Study. Fifty per cent of SWFs in the Middle East plan to increase allocation­s to private equity, 20 per cent to property and 20 per cent to infrastruc­ture over the next 12 months, it said.

Meanwhile, 63 per cent of Middle East family offices said China presented one of the best investment opportunit­ies in the next 12 months, according to the Preqin report. Family offices also had a lower preference for the Middle East as a market for deployment, which may signal a stronger appetite to see capital invested outside of the region, it said. — Agencies

 ?? ?? KUWAIT: The crude price rally is driving new opportunit­ies for oil producers to help them diversify their energy sources. — File photo by Yasser Al-Zayyat
KUWAIT: The crude price rally is driving new opportunit­ies for oil producers to help them diversify their energy sources. — File photo by Yasser Al-Zayyat

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