The National - News

QATAR INVESTMENT AUTHORITY AIMS TO TAP INTO CREDIT MARKET

▶ The Qatari sovereign wealth fund is also examining AI as an area of investment, its chief executive says

- FAREED RAHMAN

Qatar Investment Authority, the Gulf state’s $445 billion sovereign wealth fund, is looking to invest in the credit market amid new opportunit­ies, its chief executive has said.

“For the last two years, we have been very active in the credit space … companies that have been feeling the tide... have very good business models, but they have an issue with their balance sheet because of the accelerati­on of hikes of interest rates,” Mansoor Ebrahim Al-Mahmoud told the

Qatar Economic Forum. “So normally, an institutio­n like us who are very liquid, very longterm, have a risk appetite in these types of investment­s,” Mr Al Mahmoud said.

“I would advise that for the next, maybe, one year, credit space would be an interestin­g space to deploy some investment­s.”

Opportunit­ies for private credit have increased globally amid higher interest rates.

The private credit industry, or non-bank lending, is estimated to be worth about $1.3 trillion.

Private credit accounted for about 17 per cent of total credit last year and has increased by 14 per cent each year since 2000 – about twice the rate of public credit, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch.

QIA also has investment­s in a host of sectors including real estate, retail and consumer, infrastruc­ture, technology and health care. Mr Al-Mahmoud, however, did not disclose the regions or countries in which the Doha-based fund was planning to invest.

“The region allocation is really governed by a long-term vision that we have whether this is for the US market or Europe or emerging markets like China, India, Brazil,” he said. “In each market, you need to have your own sort of process and assessment to identify opportunit­ies. So for example, the rhythm [with which] we are investing in technologi­es in China and India would be a little bit more than the rhythm [with which] we are investing in technologi­es in Brazil.

“So each market will have its own characteri­stic to really identify some of the opportunit­ies that you would deploy.”

In February, QIA participat­ed in the US-based Ariel Alternativ­es’ $1.5 billion inaugural private equity fund to invest in mid-market companies spanning sectors such as retail, energy and infrastruc­ture, financial services, health care, sovereign and private wealth, and technology, according to its website.

Mr Al-Mahmoud said the fund was examining artificial intelligen­ce as an investment theme. “From time to time, we tell our teams that this is very important and this is coming … please look at that, make sure that we build a portfolio that taps into this theme,” he said.

QIA has been investing in AI and “we need some sort of legislatio­n that could manage this”, he added.

The fund is also leading a $250 million series D funding round in London-based Builder.ai, an AI-powered “composable” software platform that allows everyday businesses and people to turn their ideas into software.

The latest funding round also included participat­ion from additional existing and new investors including Iconiq Capital, Jungle Ventures and Insight Partners.

Qatar’s sovereign wealth fund has also invested $450 million in a unit of Indian power company Adani Transmissi­on for a 25.1 per cent stake in 2020 and that business “doesn’t have any issues”, Mr Al-Mahmoud said.

Billionair­e Gautam Adani’s conglomera­te, which has interests from ports to power, has lost billions in market value following Hindenburg Research’s scathing report on January 24.

The US short seller accused companies controlled by Mr Adani, at the time Asia’s richest person, of being involved in “brazen” market manipulati­on and accounting fraud. It also claimed the companies had “substantia­l debt” which put the entire group on a “precarious financial footing”.

Both Mr Adani and his company have denied the claims.

 ?? ?? Mansoor Ebrahim Al-Mahmoud, chief executive of the Qatar Investment Authority, during a panel session at the Qatar Economic Forum in Doha
Mansoor Ebrahim Al-Mahmoud, chief executive of the Qatar Investment Authority, during a panel session at the Qatar Economic Forum in Doha

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates