Khaleej Times

$125b sovereign fund takes shape

- Mahmoud Habboush

abu dhabi — Abu Dhabi is close to finalising the merger of two of its largest sovereign wealth funds — Mubadala Developmen­t and Internatio­nal Petroleum Investment.

The combined entity, which will be known as Mubadala Investment, will become the fourteenth largest fund globally with about $125 billion of assets, according to the Sovereign Wealth Fund Institute.

The emirate, home to about six per cent of the world’s proven oil reserves, is cutting spending and merging companies after oil prices declined over the past two years. Consolidat­ion is mainly taking place in the financial services industry, including the megamerger of the emirate’s two largest banks National Bank of Abu Dhabi and First Gulf Bank.

Although there are few details on how Mubadala Investment will operate, here’s what we do know: Why are Mubadala, IPIC merging? Cost is likely to be one of the considerat­ions. Abu Dhabi is reining in spending as the decline in oil prices slows economic growth and plans to cut costs by combining the funds with common assets in areas such as energy, financial services and health care.

The emirate also wants to create “an industrial and investment powerhouse that has every intention to keep growing,” according to Mubadala chief executive officer, Khaldoon Al Mubarak who will also be chief executive officer and managing director of the combined company.

The merger will create an entity which can become a “real global player,” according to Rachel Pether, an adviser at the SWFI. “Bringing IPIC and Mubadala under common control creates cost savings, efficienci­es and will allow the new streamline­d entity to aggressive­ly pursue growth opportunit­ies.” It also gives the new company more “balance sheet flexibilit­y,” she said. Who will run the new company? Mubadala CEO Mubarak will lead the new entity, while His Highness Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and Deputy Supreme Commander of the UAE Armed Forces, and Mubadala Chairman will assume

The name change to Mubadala Investment. suggests the new entity will be more about investing, rather than developing Rachel Pether,

the same role in Mubadala Investment. The fact that the company will take on Mubadala’s name and many of its executives will lead the merged entity, is a sign that Mubadala will be the more dominant force. IPIC Chairman Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed Al Nahyan will act as vice chairman, while Energy Minister Suhail bin Mohammed Al Mazrouei will be a board member of the merged company. What assets will the new company have? The combined entity will have about $125 billion of assets and $37 billion of debt. IPIC has stakes in about 18 companies encompassi­ng oil and gas exploratio­n and production, marketing, petrochemi­cals and power in places like Kazakhstan, Austria, Pakistan and Portugal. Mubadala’s holdings are more far-reached and include investment­s in oil and gas, aerospace, semiconduc­tors and real estate in about 20 countries globally. Some of its higher-profile holdings include stakes in semiconduc­tor producer Globalfoun­dries Inc. and global private equity company Carlyle Group.

Energy represents potentiall­y one of the biggest areas of overlap. The deal is set to create a global energy business with total assets greater than ConocoPhil­lips, combining production operations at Mubadala with IPIC’s focus on refining and distributi­on. What will be the new entity’s investment strategy? SWFI’s Pether expects a “radical change in strategy” from the merged company. “The name change to Mubadala Investment. suggests the new entity will be more about investing, rather than developing,” she said.

The new fund will continue to invest in the core Mubadala areas of energy, metals, technology, real estate, infrastruc­ture, health care and aerospace, while expanding into new ones, according to Mubarak. The fund will also focus on technology acquisitio­ns this year, he said in January. Mubadala is considerin­g committing $10 billion to $15 billion to partner with SoftBank Group Corp. and Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund in a new vehicle to invest in global technology, people familiar with the matter said last month. Does Abu Dhabi have other sovereign funds? Yes, the emirate has created an array of sovereign wealth and investment funds — some with overlappin­g and similar mandates — to guard the nation’s wealth and invest for the future. The Abu Dhabi Investment Authority — the world’s third largest — is perhaps the best known and representa­tive of the emirate’s funds. It invests heavily in equities globally and has an active real estate and infrastruc­ture team. Aabar Investment­s, which is a subsidiary of IPIC, holds stakes in Italian lender UniCredit SpA, Glencore Internatio­nal Plc and Richard Branson’s Virgin Galactic Ltd. commercial space venture. Government-controlled fund manager Abu Dhabi Investment Council invests in asset classes including private-equity, infrastruc­ture and hedge fund. It has major holdings in some of the emirate’s biggest banks and bought New York’s Chrysler Building in Manhattan in 2008 for an undisclose­d price.

Adviser, SWFI

Are other Abu Dhabi companies expected to merge? “There are other sectors that are congested,” said SWFI’s Pether. “We would expect to see further consolidat­ion from state-owned enterprise­s over the coming 12 months.”

Abu Dhabi is considerin­g a plan to merge Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank and Union National Bank, and also combine Abu Dhabi Islamic Bank with Al Hilal Bank, once the NBAD and FGB deal is done, people with knowledge of the matter said in November.

While stopping short of predicting further mergers in the emirate, Mubadala’s Mubarak said the emirate has blazed a trail of consolidat­ion and that more deals could follow.

“The trend is clear,” he said in September.

“The more benefits and successes these mergers show, that encourages other companies and sectors to do the same.” — Bloomberg

 ?? — Bloomberg ?? Abu Dhabi has created an array of sovereign wealth and investment funds — some with overlappin­g and similar mandates — to guard the nation’s wealth and invest for the future.
— Bloomberg Abu Dhabi has created an array of sovereign wealth and investment funds — some with overlappin­g and similar mandates — to guard the nation’s wealth and invest for the future.

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