Los Angeles Times

Saudi arrest felt in U.S.

One of the princes jailed in corruption inquiry has stakes in banks, hotels, tech.

- By Roger Vincent and Alexandra Zavis

Finance, technology, hospitalit­y, entertainm­ent and real estate: Prince Alwaleed bin Talal has invested substantia­lly and with great fanfare in all of them, as befits his status as one of the world’s richest men.

He is also believed to be under arrest in his native Saudi Arabia, ensnared in an anti-corruption dragnet that also pulled in 10 other Saudi princes, four sitting Cabinet members and tens of former Cabinet members.

The arrests, viewed as the latest move by Saudi Arabia’s young crown prince to cement his hold on power by eliminatin­g potential rivals for the throne, sent shock waves through the kingdom and internatio­nal business circles, even though such high-profile individual­s have been seen for decades as operating above the law.

No names were officially announced. But they reportedly include Prince Alwaleed, a billionair­e investor with major stakes in topname Western companies, and two of the late King Abdullah’s sons.

Prince Alwaleed is one of the top shareholde­rs in banking giant Citigroup. He has big stakes in Twitter, Apple, Motorola and Lyft. He owns 45% of Four Seasons Hotels & Resorts and has a substantia­l interest in Disneyland Paris. He’s funded some of the world’s largest real estate developmen­ts, including Canary Wharf in London and Jidda Tower in Saudi Arabia, soon to be the tallest building in the world.

After his reported arrest Saturday, questions now circle about what it will mean for the future of his business holdings in the U.S. and elsewhere.

The Saudi-owned news network Al Arabiya said a new anti-corruption committee headed by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman was investigat­ing the response to flooding in the city of Jidda that killed more than 100 people in 2009, as well as an outbreak of the sometimes fatal Middle East respirator­y syndrome, or MERS. But the specific accusation­s against those detained were not immediatel­y clear.

“I think they are using corruption as a tool to further smooth the path towards the eventual succession of the crown prince,” said Kristian Coates Ulrichsen, a Middle East fellow at Rice University’s Baker Institute for Public Policy.

In less than three years, the crown prince has acquired oversight of nearly every major aspect of the country’s economy, defense, internal security, social reforms and foreign policy, probably causing some resentment in a royal family unaccustom­ed to the concentrat­ion of so much power in the hands of one young prince.

But the prince’s many supporters have applauded his ambitious plan to modernize the ultraconse­rvative kingdom, which is home to Islam’s holiest shrines, and reduce its historic dependence on oil.

His Saudi Vision 2030 calls for liberalizi­ng the economy and easing social restrictio­ns in order to preserve stability in the face of lower oil prices and a burgeoning youth population in need of employment.

Saudi leaders said the launch of the corruption investigat­ion heralds a “new era” of transparen­cy and accountabi­lity, reforms that are needed to attract more foreign investment.

“The state will never tolerate or condone any violations of local or internatio­nal business standards,” Finance Minister Mohammed bin Abdullah pledged in a statement Sunday carried by the Saudi Press Agency.

Analysts, however, said the arrests are likely to rattle investors because so many of the people rounded up were key players in the Saudi business community for decades.

Besides Prince Alwaleed, those reported to have been swept up in the investigat­ion include Adel Fakeih, minthe ister of economy and planning; Ibrahim Assaf, a former finance minister; Amr Dabbagh, the former head of the Saudi Arabian General Investment Authority; Bakr Binladin, head of the Saudi Binladin Group, a major constructi­on conglomera­te; and Walid Ibrahim, who runs the Arabic satellite group MBC.

Also apparently purged was a former rival for the throne, Prince Miteb bin Abdullah, who was arrested and replaced as head of the elite national guard. Prince Miteb was the last member of the late King Abdullah’s branch of the family to retain high office. His brother, Prince Turki bin Abdullah, a former governor of Riyadh, was also believed to have been swept up in the investigat­ion.

“Anti-corruption commission­s in the past never targeted people that were this influentia­l and this important,” said Mohammed Khalid Alyahya, a non-resident fellow at the Atlantic Council’s Rafik Hariri Center for the Middle East. “The message that was sent is this will no longer be tolerated.”

Prince Alwaleed, who attended Menlo College in Atherton, Calif., burst onto U.S. financial scene in 1991 when the then-36-yearold made the risky move of buying an $800-million stake in Citi, which was being pressured by regulators to increase its capital base. By 2005, his Citi holdings were worth $10 billion, which made him one of the 10 richest people in the world at the time, according to Forbes, and earned him a nickname he was said to encourage: “the Buffett of Arabia,” after Warren Buffett.

He lived a lavish lifestyle, relishing the headlines he earned that included the purchase of Donald Trump’s yacht in 1991. He lives in a palace in the capital city of Riyadh that has 420 rooms with marble swimming pools and portraits of himself, Forbes said. He also has a 120-acre resort property at the edge of town that includes five lakes, a zoo, a small-scale Grand Canyon, five homes and 60 vehicles.

He has even managed to draw attention at times when he passes on making an investment, generating buzz in 2015 by meeting bosses of Snapchat only to later decide against funding the Los Angeles social media platform.

Since his Citi gamble, subsequent investment­s in other high-profile companies haven’t achieved such spectacula­r returns. The image-conscious prince objected in 2013 about being dropped from the Forbes’ top 10 list. (The magazine ranked him at No. 45 this year with an estimated personal fortune of $17 billion).

It’s not immediatel­y clear how Prince Alwaleed’s arrest will affect the Western companies in which he has invested.

The anti-corruption committee led by Crown Prince Salman has the right to issue arrest warrants, impose travel restrictio­ns and freeze bank accounts, the Saudi Press Agency said. It can also trace funds, prevent the transfer of funds or the liquidatio­n of assets, and take other precaution­ary measures until cases are referred to the judiciary.

Prince Alwaleed owns 95% of Kingdom Holding Co., which he uses to invest his wealth. The company was worth about $10 billion before shares closed down 7.6% in Riyadh on Sunday, a loss of about $750 million. Besides Kingdom Holding, the prince owns real estate in Saudi Arabia, the majority of Arabic-language entertainm­ent firm Rotana, and other assets, according to Forbes.

Kingdom Holding said in a statement Sunday that it is aware of media reports about the arrest of its chairman but that it is continuing its normal business operations and still has the backing of royal leadership.

If Saudi officials opted to liquidate some or all of Kingdom Holding’s investment­s, however, the effect on U.S. markets would probably be slight, USC economist Richard Green said.

Despite Prince Alwaleed’s high public profile, Kingdom Holdings’ $10-billion valuation is small compared with big players such as Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway at $460 billion and the Vanguard Group, which has $4.5 trillion in assets under management.

“Of course, $10 billion is a big number, but in terms of context it’s not so much,” Green said. “If Warren Buffett starts selling everything Berkshire Hathaway owns, that would be a problem.”

Although a sudden influx of trading volume can in some circumstan­ces drive down a company’s stock price, a potential sell-off is unlikely to have major market ramificati­ons because the move would not be viewed by analysts as a vote of no-confidence in the Western companies affected, Green said.

President Trump spoke to King Salman on Saturday, as the president headed to Japan, but did not mention the crackdown in remarks afterward.

The White House on Sunday released a detailed descriptio­n of Trump’s phone call with the king. Salman had called Trump to express his condolence­s after the terrorist attack in New York City that left eight people dead, the White House said.

The two also discussed the extremist group Islamic State, the successful intercepti­on of a missile attack against Riyadh from territory in neighborin­g Yemen, Saudi purchases of U.S. military equipment and the expected public offering of Aramco, the national oil company.

 ?? Balkis Press / TNS ?? SAUDI ARABIA’S King Salman, left, with son Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in March 2016.
Balkis Press / TNS SAUDI ARABIA’S King Salman, left, with son Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in March 2016.

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