Friday 27 January 2023

PIF: How Giant #Saudi Arabian Fund Is Building a Post-Oil Future: QuickTake - Bloomberg

PIF: How Giant Saudi Arabian Fund Is Building a Post-Oil Future: QuickTake - Bloomberg


In a world where deep-pocketed investors are becoming harder to find, Saudi Arabia’s $600 billion sovereign wealth fund is spreading around the oil-rich kingdom’s largesse as never before. The Public Investment Fund has snapped up sports teams and electric carmakers and funded new cities in the desert as it seeks to amass $2 trillion in assets by 2030. Whether all these investments earn a big return is beside the point. The fund’s ultimate goal is to diversify the kingdom’s oil-reliant economy and project Saudi influence around the world.

1. How has the fund’s purpose changed?
What was once a sleepy government holding company is now a vehicle for the global ambitions of the country’s de facto ruler, Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman, under a plan known as Vision 2030. Its main purpose is to stimulate inward investment, access new technologies, develop local industries and address widespread underemployment in the kingdom. One focus is tourism: In a country that until recently was largely closed off to foreign holidaymakers and entertainment was a taboo, PIF is investing in luxury resorts, cinemas and entertainment complexes to lure more tourists, and to stop Saudis seeking fun abroad. It also does deals just to make money. The fund is expanding its team in New York to manage a growing portfolio of US stocks.

2. What does the PIF invest in?
It’s gradually reducing its legacy holdings in local businesses such as Saudi National Bank and Saudi Telecom Co. to free up money for other investments. Those include national projects like Neom, a $500-billion city-state that would run entirely on renewable power and export green energy. Since 2016, when it committed $45 billion to SoftBank Group Corp.’s technology-focused Vision Fund, PIF’s foreign interests have also mushroomed. An investment in electric carmaker Lucid Motors Inc. has increased in value to almost $10 billion and the company is opening a factory in Saudi Arabia. The fund has stakes in video game makers Activision Blizzard Inc. and Electronic Arts Inc. and the digital services and retail businesses of Asia’s richest man, Mukesh Ambani.

3. What makes the PIF unusual?
While traditional sovereign funds invest excess national wealth to generate profits in the future, PIF was repurposed as a global investor while the Saudi budget was in deficit. As a result, it’s also turned to borrowing in order to hit its growth targets, which will require it to spend prolifically on development projects at home. It’s already tapped global banks for multi-billion-dollar loans. In 2022, it raised $3 billion from its debut green bond sale. While it may seem incongruous for a petrodollar-backed fund to be raising money from climate-conscious investors, the PIF is the main backer of most of the kingdom’s renewable energy investments. Through Neom, it’s funding one of the world’s largest projects to produce hydrogen fuel without creating any harmful emissions.




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