Gulf News

Mubadala halts talks on Abraaj deal

Other potential buyers include Abu Dhabi Financial Group

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Abu Dhabi state investor Mubadala has halted talks to buy Abraaj’s investment business, two sources said, in a blow to the private equity firm which is facing an investigat­ion by investors into how it used some of their money.

Dubai-based Abraaj, which denies any wrongdoing, is considerin­g selling some or all of the unit following a row with four investors, including the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the World Bank’s Internatio­nal Finance Corporatio­n, over how it used their money in a $1 billion (Dh3.67 billion) health care fund.

Mubadala, which has more than $200 billion in assets, and Abraaj held initial talks a month ago, but these did not progress, one of the sources told Reuters.

Abraaj said it does comment on market speculatio­n, while Mubadala declined to comment yesterday.

“We remain focused on working collaborat­ively with our investors and continuing to execute on the re-organisati­on of our firm to pave the way for continued long-term growth and value creation,” Abraaj said in an email to Reuters.

Investment banks have also approached internatio­nal private equity firms to look at Abraaj’s investment arm, but some are holding off until after an investigat­ion by forensic accounting experts Ankura Consulting, which has been commission­ed by the investors, two other sources said.

Other potential buyers include Abu Dhabi Financial Group (ADFG), sources told Reuters last month.

ADFG, which manages $6.5 billion in assets, declined to comment about its interest in Abraaj’s investment business. The Gates Foundation and the IFC, the World Bank’s private finance arm, have both declined to comment on the row.

Shake-up

The fund dispute, which erupted this year has jolted Abraaj, a top investor in the developing world founded in 2002 by Arif Naqvi, who in late February handed the running of the fund to two co-chief executives.

Abraaj has also shaken up its management, suspended new investment­s, freed up large investors from millions of dollars in capital commitment­s and is reviewing its corporate structure.

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