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Wall Street heads to Saudi Arabia for deals

Elites of global finance descending on Riyadh from Oct 29

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DUBAI: For the second straight year, the risks of doing business in Saudi Arabia are pushing their way onto the agenda of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed Salman’s glittering investment showcase.

The elites of global finance are descending on Riyadh from Oct 29, days after Saudi Aramco delayed its on-again off-again initial public offering in the wake of a missile attack that crippled its biggest oil processing facility. The company is pushing to complete the sale this year after internatio­nal money managers’ skepticism at its touted US$2 trillion valuation.

The timing of the three-day Future Investment Initiative – an annual jamboree that showcases the kingdom’s ambitions – is crucial for Saudi Arabia. It will be the most visible display that it’s business as usual after Wall Street boycotted the 2018 event following the murder of government critic Jamal Khashoggi. The A-list attendees this year include scores of chief executives, such as Citigroup Inc’s Mike Corbat and Blackrock Inc’s Larry Fink – both no-shows last year.

This year’s event “will be concretely different” from last year, said Ayham Kamel, Middle East practice head at Eurasia Group, a consultanc­y.

“Wall Street executives appear more willing to engage given the importance of Saudi Arabia to their business. Aramco is one factor, but a broader set of considerat­ions are at play. Of course, the kingdom still has to demonstrat­e that its modernisat­ion plans can progress and attract foreign capital.”

Hot deals

Senior executives from many of the 25 banks working on Aramco’s mammoth deal – which could see advisers sharing a fee pool of as much as Us$450mil – are set to attend next week’s meeting.

Credit Suisse Group AG’S CEO Tidjane Thiam, Citigroup’s top dealmaker Tyler Dickson and Jpmorgan Chase & Co’s head of global banking Carlos Hernandez – who led their banks’ pitches to Aramco and are actively involved in the deal – are due to attend the event, where chairman Yasir Al-rumayyan will host thousands of delegates alongside the crown prince.

Deutsche Bank AG CEO Christian Sewing is also set to be there. He did not attend last year.

A formal agenda of speakers and delegates isn’t yet available on the FII website. Details of the attendees came from people with knowledge of the matter who asked not to be identified. The people said the plans weren’t final and may change.

Representa­tives for Deutsche Bank, Credit Suisse and Citigroup declined to comment. Representa­tives for Jpmorgan didn’t immediatel­y respond to requests for comment. A spokesman for the Public Investment Fund, which organises the event, wasn’t immediatel­y available to comment.

Deal hype

The hype over deals in Opec’s biggest oil producer masks a struggle to attract the longterm foreign direct investment­s needed to reduce the reliance on oil. While FDI more than doubled last year to about Us$3bil, it remains well below the average level of the past decade. That’s in part due to uncertaint­y over the government’s economic plans and its human rights record – the crown prince sought to isolate neighbouri­ng Qatar in 2017 and the same year declared an alleged crackdown on corruption, which ensnared hundreds of the country’s billionair­es and businessme­n.

“This year the turnout will be higher but it will be more for fact finding and understand­ing deal potential,” said Richard Segal, a London-based senior emerging-markets analyst at Manulife Asset Management. “There are clearly post-aramco deals to be done, but the question for them will be the length of the latest delay.”

Back to business

Ken Moelis of Moelis & Co and vice-chairman Eric Cantor were two of a handful of Western bank executives that did show up at last year’s summit, which was held weeks after Khashoggi was murdered in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul.

While the killing prompted a brief spell of skittishne­ss over doing business with the kingdom, some of the world’s top banking executives, including Fink and then-hsbc Holdings Plc CEO John Flint, returned to Saudi Arabia in April for a two-day financial conference.

As well as the who’s who of finance, political figures such as US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and Jared Kushner, a White House adviser and President Donald Trump’s son-in-law, plan to attend the forum after skipping last year. The CIA has concluded that Prince Mohammed ordered Khashoggi’s murder, according to the Washington Post.

“Politicall­y, the United States will also send a big delegation to support Crown Prince Mohammad,” said Eurasia’s Kamel. “It’s a way for the young prince to demonstrat­e his continued relevance despite the geopolitic­al risks facing his country.”

 ??  ?? Attendee: Blackrock CEO Fink is expected to be present at Riyadh. — Bloomberg
Attendee: Blackrock CEO Fink is expected to be present at Riyadh. — Bloomberg
 ??  ?? To attend: Credit Suisse CEO Thiam is also due to attend. — Reuters
To attend: Credit Suisse CEO Thiam is also due to attend. — Reuters

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