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Saudi Arabia Plans $2 Trillion Megafund for Post-Oil Era: Deputy Crown Prince

Bilad al-Haramayn

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Saudi Arabia Plans $2 Trillion Megafund for Post-Oil Era: Deputy Crown Prince
Saudi Arabia is getting ready for the twilight of the oil age by creating the world’s largest sovereign wealth fund for the kingdom’s most prized assets.

Over a five-hour conversation, Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman laid out his vision for the Public Investment Fund, which will eventually control more than $2 trillion and help wean the kingdom off oil. As part of that strategy, the prince said Saudi will sell shares in Aramco’s parent company and transform the oil giant into an industrial conglomerate. The initial public offering could happen as soon as next year, with the country currently planning to sell less than 5 percent.
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Mohammed Bin Salman, Saudi Arabia's Deputy Crown Prince, interviewed in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on Wednesday, March 30, 2016.​

“IPOing Aramco and transferring its shares to PIF will technically make investments the source of Saudi government revenue, not oil,” the prince said in an interview at the royal compound in Riyadh that ended at 4 a.m. on Thursday. “What is left now is to diversify investments. So within 20 years, we will be an economy or state that doesn’t depend mainly on oil.”

Almost eight decades since the first Saudi oil was discovered, King Salman’s 30-year-old son is aiming to transform the world’s biggest crude exporter into an economy fit for the next era. As his strategy takes shape, the speed of change may shock a conservative society accustomed to decades of government handouts.

Buying Buffett and Gates
The sale of Aramco, or Saudi Arabian Oil Co., is planned for 2018 or even a year earlier, according to the prince. The fund will then play a major role in the economy, investing at home and abroad. It would be big enough to buy Apple Inc., Google parent Alphabet Inc., Microsoft Corp. and Berkshire Hathaway Inc. -- the world’s four largest publicly traded companies.

PIF ultimately plans to increase the proportion of foreign investments to 50 percent of the fund by 2020 from 5 percent now, said Yasir Alrumayyan, secretary-general of the fund’s board.

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The blueprint for structural change follows a series of measures last year to curb spending and prevent the budget deficit from exceeding 15 percent of gross domestic product. At the end of December, authorities raised the prices of fuel and electricity and pledged to end wasteful budget spending after oil prices plunged.

More will follow those “quick fixes” as part of a “National Transformation Plan” to be announced within a month, including steps to raise non-oil revenue steadily through various measures including fees and value-added taxes.

“We are working on increasing the efficiency of spending,” said Prince Mohammed, who is second-in-line to the throne. The government used to spend up to 40 percent more than allocated in its budget and that was whittled to 12 percent in 2015, he said. “So I don’t believe that we have a real problem when it comes to low oil prices.”

Too Late?
The question is whether the reaction to the more than halving in the price of a barrel of crude has come too late, especially given the Saudi influence over the oil market. The country will only freeze output if Iran and other major producers do so, the prince said.

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An International Monetary Fund study in 2014 noted there were “many examples of failure” by countries trying to reduce reliance on energy production and few successes. Gulf Arab monarchies may have missed their best chance when oil prices were above $100 a barrel rather than about $40 now.

“It is clear Saudi Arabia needs to reform, diversify, and re-energize its economy, but this will involve more than just increasing investments in non-oil industries,” said Paul Sullivan, a professor of security studies at Georgetown University in Washington. “One cannot order economic reforms like a multiple course dinner.”

Taking Control
Prince Mohammed has consolidated more power than anyone in his position since the founding of the kingdom in 1932. His attempt to shake up the economy comes against the backdrop of mounting domestic security threats and regional turmoil, with the Sunni-ruled kingdom fighting a war in Yemen against Shiite rebels it says are backed by Iran.

As Defense Minister, Prince Mohammed leads the military effort. He also oversees ministries including finance, oil and the economy through the Council for Economic and Development Affairs. The council, which was established after his father became king, also controls the Public Investment Fund.

More Casual
Appearing casually in a white robe, but without the traditional Saudi headdress, the prince sat in an office adorned with posters of King Abdulaziz Al Saud, the founder of Saudi Arabia, King Salman and Crown Prince Muhammad Bin Nayef.

He said the wealth fund already holds stakes in companies including Saudi Basic Industries Corp., the world’s second-biggest chemicals manufacturer, and National Commercial Bank, the kingdom’s largest lender.

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The fund is looking at “two opportunities outside Saudi Arabia” in the financial industry, the prince said, declining to name the possible acquisition targets. “I believe that we will conclude at least one of them.”

It has already started to become more active abroad. In July, PIF acquired a 38 percent stake in South Korea’s Posco Engineering & Construction Co. for $1.1 billion and the same month agreed to a $10 billion partnership to invest in Russia with the Russian Direct Investment Fund.

‘Aggressive’ Plan
The fund has been hiring specialists for markets, private equity and risk management, said Alrumayyan, PIF’s secretary-general and a former chief of Credit Agricole SA-backed Saudi Fransi Capital.

“We’re working now on different fronts,” he said. “Now the government is transferring some of its assets, lands, some of the companies to us. We have different projects in tourism and in new industries that are untapped in Saudi.”

Over a multiple-course dinner with the prince and several top Saudi officials, he described the overseas investment plan as “very aggressive,” though said PIF would initially be skewed toward domestic assets by the addition of Aramco.

“Undoubtedly, it will be the largest fund on Earth,” the prince said. “This will happen as soon as Aramco goes public.”

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/artic...s-2-trillion-megafund-to-dwarf-all-its-rivals

In related news.

Saudi Arabia's Post-Oil Plan Starts April 25, Prince Says
Saudi Arabia will announce a comprehensive plan to prepare the kingdom for the post-oil era on April 25, Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman said.

The “Vision for the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia” will encompass several developmental, economic, social and other programs, Prince Mohammed said in an interview on Thursday at King Salman’s private farm in Diriyah, the original home of the Al Saud royal family.

One component of the plan is the National Transformation Program, which will be launched a month or 45 days after this month’s announcement, said the prince, who is the king’s son and second-in-line to the throne of the world’s top oil exporter. The plan to transform Saudi Aramco from an oil company into an energy and industrial conglomerate, as well as the future of the Public Investment Fund, will also be part of the comprehensive vision, he said.

Saudi Arabia is seeking to overhaul the economy to reduce the kingdom’s reliance on oil after the plunge in crude prices. Prince Mohammed said in an interview late last month that the plan involves raising non-oil revenue by $100 billion by 2020 as well as turning the PIF into the world’s largest sovereign wealth fund for the kingdom’s most prized assets.

Saudi authorities are weighing measures that include more steps to restructure subsidies, imposing a value-added tax, and a levy on energy and sugary drinks as well as luxury items. The National Transformation Program will also focus on ways to boost economic growth, create jobs, attract investors and hold government offices more accountable.


Prince Mohammed, who is leading the biggest shake-up of the economy since Saudi Arabia’s founding, oversees the Council for Economic and Development Affairs, which includes the country’s finance, oil and economy ministries. The council, established after his father became king, also controls the PIF.

Past rulers have avoided relying on the public for additional revenue for fear of triggering a backlash from one of the world’s most conservative societies. Government spending, jobs and subsidies have typically been the engine of economic growth.

The prince said last month that Saudi Arabia will sell less than 5 percent of Aramco’s parent in an initial public offering that could happen as early as next year. The company will be transferred to the PIF, which will “technically make investments the source of Saudi government revenue, not oil,” the prince said in the earlier interview.

The fund will then play a major role in the economy, investing at home and abroad. The PIF ultimately plans to increase the proportion of foreign investments to 50 percent of the fund by 2020 from 5 percent now, excluding Aramco.

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/artic...unch-plan-for-the-future-april-25-prince-says
 
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Good initiative that Saudia has started to think about Economy outside of Oil Revenue

Pakistan welcomes any Investment from Saudia Arabia. Pakistan offers unique chance for investment in
none oil sector. CPEC offers great investment options


1) Agricultural Area & Food Sector:
  • Invest in Agricultural Sector, to make none cultivable regions , cultivable by investment. Share in the perpetual profits from food sector (15% of revenue)
  • Set up food manufacturing companies or take over the older companies (50-50% Joint venture)
2) Construction:
  • Help develop Urban city condo buildings downtown, rental revenue (50-50% Joint venture), Cities like Gawadar , Coastal cities of Karachi
  • Coastal Villas (Rental)/(Property sold full price)
  • Condo (Rental)/(Property sold full price)

3) DAM & Power Generation:
  • Help develop new DAM / Water resource preservation reservoir
  • Revenue generation from power (15% perpetual income)
  • 10% of water preserved can also be used in Saudia

4) Defense Sector: (Saving on defense purchase for Saudia)
  • Join the Pakistan Defense projects (Tanks / JF17 Thunder/ Ships /Submarine)
  • Purchase defense articles for your own country , plus outside sales
  • Be able to resell
  • 50-50% revenue share from sales of joint projects

5) Invest in Pakistan Mega Industries (Industries that can make 10 Billion / Year revenue)
  • Steels Mills : Invest & revamp the mills with modern tools (10% profit share), CPEC needs steel
  • Railways : Invest & rebuild the railways , we have 180 Million customers (10% profit share)
  • PIA (Airlines) : Invest & revitalize the brand , bring in new management & planes (10% profit share)
  • Establish SA-Pak: Auto Manufacturing plant (50-50%) revenue share, design car/engine
  • Joint venture for Commercial Trade Ships manufacturing (50-50%) revenue share
6) Invest in City Waste Management Sector
  • Setting up processing plants to process waste in cities (Continuous revenue) - 15%

7) Boosting Tourism in Pakistan:
  • Setup new hotel chains along CPEC route (50% / 50% revenue share )
  • Set up international level Aquarium (50% revenue share from profits from visitors)
  • Help introduce Metro Bus in Urban cities (50-50% revenue share)

8) Invest in Telecom Sector in Pakistan:
  • Bid higher then local bidders to help grow telecom sector (50-50% revenue share)

9) Invest in Bio Medical / Health Science Sector
  • Help move research of Medicine forward joint venture Pakistan/Saudia (50-50% revenue share)
10) Space Technology:
Joint Space research Center (Not profit based more promoting research in both countries)
 
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This sounds like great news but i wonder what took the Saudi so long.
 
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This sounds like great news but i wonder what took the Saudi so long.

Saudi Arabia has made such promises in the past -- to diverse beyond an oil-based economy -- but never seems to follow through. High oil prices gave no incentives to make this change, but since the country will soon be controlled by a new generation of leaders, who are younger and more adept to change, we can finally see movement on this front.

Of course, for Saudi Arabia to liberalize its economy it has to liberalize its country politically and culturally.
 
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Saudi Arabia has made such promises in the past -- to diverse beyond an oil-based economy -- but never seems to follow through. High oil prices gave no incentives to make this change, but since the country will soon be controlled by a new generation of leaders, who are younger and more adept to change, we can finally see movement on this front.

Of course, for Saudi Arabia to liberalize its economy it has to liberalize its country politically and culturally.

Great points! but i think it'll be a long time before Saudi Arabia makes any serious reforms.
 
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Great points! but i think it'll be a long time before Saudi Arabia makes any serious reforms.

You base this claim of yours on what exactly? I am curious. Changes are occurring while we speak. Major changes as described in post 1, the recent decision to diminish Hai'a's powers significantly, the serious and concrete talk of introducing a green card system, talk of introducing a tourist visa, more privatization, greater involvement of women in the workforce, women being allowed to stand and vote in the municipal elections etc. Not to mention the hundreds of infrastructural projects ranging from numerous new industrial cities of a significant size (second only to China actually) all over the country, new universities, financial districts, huge expansion projects in Makkah and Madinah, new public transport in the form of top modern railways connecting the country (several 1000 km in length), metros, airports, investments in renewable energy (solar, wind), nuclear energy etc. Even the military sector is improving step by step.

All NATO-type small arms used by Saudi Arabia are produced in Saudi Arabia alongside ammunition from 9mm up to 20mm cannon shells.
Recently, the factories were upgraded with the help of Denel corporation (of South Africa) to produce mortar bombs and artillery shells up to 155mm caliber.
Many of the light armored vehicles and MRAPs are now produced in Saudi Arabia (Shibl-1, Shibl-2 and Masmak MRAP)
In cooperation with Antonov, Saudi Arabia will produce Antonov Cargo planes in-country
Czech Manufacturer Tatra has an assembly plant in country that already provides medium and heavy transport trucks for Saudi forces
Saudi Arabia already produces the British Thales Damocles targeting pod in country
The same company maintains the spares for the Sniper targeting pods
Taqnia Aernoautics will build a helicopter production facility in country with the help of Sikorsky
The recent F-15SA deal included parts by Al Salam Aircraft company Most notably the front fuselage and the wing portions
Overall, it's not where it needs to be (far from it) but the situation is getting better. After all we only have 25 million people (natives) so this limits the capabilities especially as we are a developing country on most fronts.

So please tell me once again that no changes are occurring.

Anyway welcome to the forum.:agree:
 
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You base this claim of yours on what exactly? I am curious. Changes are occurring while we speak. Major changes as described in post 1, the recent decision to diminish Hai'a's powers significantly, the serious and concrete talk of introducing a green card system, talk of introducing a tourist visa, more privatization, greater involvement of women in the workforce, women being allowed to stand and vote in the municipal elections etc.

[....]

So please tell me once again that no changes are occurring.

Anyway welcome to the forum.:agree:

Thanks for the welcome!

Serious changes come from a genuine shift in leadership, Saudi Arabia has been ruled by Al-Saud's son who were born pre-1950. (Salman himself was born in 1935.)

They have the values and mentality of the time period they grew up in. So while there will be changes, they'll be minor because the current generation of Al-Sauds is ancient and will never take these changes seriously.

Example: Municipal elections. Saudi Arabia's first elections was 2005. The 2nd was suppose to be in 2009 but King Abdullah delayed them why? He never took the elections seriously. It was just to get Saudis off his back.

But the elections came back in 2011 because of the Arab Spring protests.

Saudi Arabia can have changes with say Prince Mohammed bin Salman, he's young, educated, modern and in touch with young Saudis and their needs.

But when will Mohammed become King? In 2050? by then it'll be too late as the new generations of Saudis will emerge.
 
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Thanks for the welcome!

Serious changes come from a genuine shift in leadership, Saudi Arabia has been ruled by Al-Saud's son who were born pre-1950. (Salman himself was born in 1935.)

They have the values and mentality of the time period they grew up in. So while there will be changes, they'll be minor because the current generation of Al-Sauds is ancient and will never take these changes seriously.

Example: Municipal elections. Saudi Arabia's first elections was 2005. The 2nd was suppose to be in 2009 but King Abdullah delayed them why? He never took the elections seriously. It was just to get Saudis off his back.

But the elections came back in 2011 because of the Arab Spring protests.

Saudi Arabia can have changes with say Prince Mohammed bin Salman, he's young, educated, modern and in touch with young Saudis and their needs.

But when will Mohammed become King? In 2050? by then it'll be too late as the new generations of Saudis will emerge.

You are welcome.

While I agree with some of your criticism and equally want to see more political, social and economic reforms being implemented as soon as possible, it has to be said, that it is the conservative and Najdi-domainted clergy that is and has been preventing more rapid reforms. King Salman might be more conservative than the late King Abdullah but in reality he is not the one that runs the show currently but his advisers, Prince Nayef (Crown Prince) and Prince Muhammad (Deputy Crown Prince). King Salman's health is not the best.

Actually Prince Muhammad bin Salman is 30 years old and he is the second in line to the throne. Nayef is the Crown Prince and he was born in 1959 (he has only two daughters) and he is not conservative. He is known as the most pro-US House of Saud member and he is also known for combating terrorists with a very harsh hand. He is very well-known in the intelligence service worldwide.

Anyway one should not forget that almost 2/3 of the population is below 25 and that the current generation have other priorities than their parents and grandparents generation.

Anyway the problem of lack of social, political and economic reforms is a problem (unfortunately) that most of the Arab world is struggling with from Morocco in the West to Oman in the East. Same story with most Muslim and developing nations regardless of continent. I have to go, nice talking to you.
 
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