XM tidak memberikan layanan kepada penduduk Amerika Serikat.

Saudi megafund’s success rests on fuzzy local bets



<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><head><title>RPT-BREAKINGVIEWS-Saudi megafund’s success rests on fuzzy local bets</title></head><body>

The authors are Reuters Breakingviews columnists. The opinions expressed are their own.

By George Hay and Karen Kwok

RIYADH, Nov 5 (Reuters Breakingviews) -Saudi Arabia’s main mission is to diversify its heavily oil-dependent economy. But that “Vision 2030” project is undergoing a transition of its own. The kingdom’s $950 billion Public Investment Fund (PIF), tasked by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MbS) with delivery, is increasingly focused on a collection of relatively young domestic firms. While this segment’s value now exceeds $250 billion and is growing rapidly, the PIF’s dual mandate of boosting profits and jobs looks tough.

Since MbS started expanding the investment vehicle in 2016, the PIF has made a string of high-profile global bets, like committing $45 billion to SoftBank chief Masayoshi Son’s first Vision Fund, bankrolling a new golf tour, and making contrarian punts on Western blue-chip stocks during 2020 lockdowns. It has also made outlandish plans for flashy “giga-projects” to lure foreign tourists and businesses, the most notorious of which is NEOM – an entire new region in the northwest of the kingdom intended to feature a futuristic 170-kilometre-long city known as The Line.

Yet drill down into what PIF actually is today, and it’s clear that the vehicle’s Governor Yasir Al-Rumayyan has a different focus. The overseas investments, like Newcastle United Football Club and Uber Technologies UBER.N, collectively amounted to just 20% of assets, or $156 billion, at the end of 2023. Despite the massive spending required to complete the giga-projects, the total investments in that segment and the wider real estate and infrastructure unit amounted to $126 billion, or just 17% of PIF’s assets under management (AUM).

By far the largest portion of the vehicle’s investments, by contrast, sat at home. One bucket, called Saudi Equity Holdings, accounted for 27% of AUM and owned stakes in established listed companies like Saudi Telecom 7010.SE and Saudi National Bank 1180.SE. That was before the government this year transferred 8% of oil giant Aramco 2222.SE into the PIF, which altered the numbers.

The other, much faster-growing segment is called Saudi Sector Development. The division houses about 100 homegrown companies with a paper value of $251 billion as of December, or one-third of total AUM, making it by far the PIF’s biggest division in 2023. The companies include everything from unlisted sports and leisure startups to mining and healthcare groups.

This segment is halfway between a startup incubator and a private equity portfolio. Even more strikingly, its valuation doubled between the end of 2022 and 2023, making it comfortably the fastest growing part of the PIF. According to a person familiar with the matter, the majority of this spike came from the vehicle’s decision to deploy new capital, rather than a paper valuation uplift.

Riyadh’s Future Investment Initiative last week was full of these shiny new companies, which include startups selling Saudi’s distinctive brand of camel-milk ice cream and those focusing on female wellness. Many have hired noted foreign CEOs, attracted by the chance to deploy a ton of cash. SURJ Sports Investments, which is behind the UFC rival Professional Fighters League, is now headed by former Australian soccer executive Danny Townsend. Riyadh Air, an entirely new flagship carrier intended to help ferry 150 million tourists to Saudi by 2030, has secured the services of former Etihad boss Tony Douglas. And Savvy Games, which in 2021 secured $38 billion from PIF to invest in the gaming and e-sports sectors, is led by former senior Activision Blizzard executive Brian Ward.

Assessing the current financial health of these entities is complicated by their youth, and limited disclosure. The aggregate numbers imply an average valuation of about $2.5 billion per company, which seems a stretch given the nascent stage of many of the firms. But it’s likely that at least some are making headway. Savvy Games, for example, last year completed the $4.9 billion acquisition of U.S. mobile gaming group Scopely. Given that the target’s “Monopoly Go!” game has generated $3 billion of revenue in little more than one year, the company may already be worth multiples of the purchase price, since gaming peers like Electronic Arts EA.O trade on enterprise values of as much as 5 times sales.

Yet building homegrown stars by throwing money at companies is tough. Just ask SoftBank’s Son, whose Vision Fund 1 experienced underwhelming returns despite a $100 billion pot to spend. A bigger headache is that Rumayyan is not being judged solely on financial performance. All the portfolio companies have a second mandate to develop employment and economic demand across 13 sectors in their home country. Vision 2030 requires 65% of economic activity to stem from the private sector, against 48% as of last December. That gives PIF executives like Rumayyan, and national development division head Jerry Todd, a tough job.

Saudi faces major problems with a domestic education system that doesn’t churn out enough skilled young people, and a business environment that still often hinges on personal connections, rather than merit. Savvy Games exemplifies how international scale and local employment heft don’t necessarily yet go together. Saudi’s young population seems like a good match for the gaming sector, but only 80 of Savvy’s 3,500 staff are based in the kingdom, and only 30 of them are actually Saudi.

Nor does the Gulf state have limitless resources. The country’s finance ministry is projecting a 3% fiscal deficit even in 2027. The Saudi government does have $445 billion of net foreign assets on top of its PIF wealth. But a substantial drop in the price of oil, which provides 62% of state revenues, would limit Riyadh’s ability to keep topping up the state fund. Government debt is admittedly only 27% of GDP, offering room to borrow, but issuing bonds to pour into local startups seems like a risky move.

That backdrop will factor into the thinking of senior PIF types like Todd, especially since the fund is starting to nail down its strategic priorities for the five years from 2026, according to a person familiar with the matter. Saudi Finance Minister Mohammed Al-Jadaan has already hinted at possible changes to the pace of giga-project plans. Bankers at the FII conference also expected Riyadh to rein in breakneck construction plans, like hotels, in case the hoped-for tourist boom fails to materialise.

All of which leaves Rumayyan’s local corporate bets in a potentially tricky position. They’re essentially carrying the hopes of the government, but with an arguably vulnerable source of funding and a domestic labour force and demand that remain unknown quantities. If the local stars do no more than flicker, neither the outcomes nor the returns will look pretty.

Follow @gfhay and @karenkkwok on X


CONTEXT NEWS

Saudi Arabia’s Future Investment Initiative took place in Riyadh between Oct. 29 and Oct. 31.


Graphic: The PIF invests most of its resources at home https://reut.rs/3UCFesB

Graphic: New Saudi firms are the fastest growing part of the PIF https://reut.rs/3CeyPNR


Editing by Liam Proud and Oliver Taslic

</body></html>

Aset Terkait


Berita Terbaru

TSX opens lower as investors focus on US election


Wall St opens higher as Americans head to polls

U
U

Crypto shares rise on bitcoin strength


U.S. STOCKS Emerson, Apollo, Cummins

A
B
N
D
U
C
R
C

Bruker falls after lowering FY profit forecast

Pengungkapan: Entitas XM Group menyediakan layanan khusus eksekusi dan akses ke Fasilitas Trading Online kami, yang memungkinkan Anda untuk melihat dan/atau menggunakan konten yang tersedia pada atau melalui situs, yang tidak untuk mengubah atau memperluas, serta tidak mengubah atau memperluas hal tersebut. Akses dan penggunaan ini selalu sesuai dengan: (i) Syarat dan Ketentuan; (ii) Peringatan Risiko; dan (iii) Pengungkapan Penuh. Oleh karena itu, konten disediakan hanya sebagai informasi umum. Anda juga harus ketahui bahwa konten Fasilitas Trading Online kami bukan sebagai ajakan atau tawaran untuk untuk melakukan transaksi apa pun di pasar finansial. Trading di pasar finansial mana pun melibatkan tingkat risiko yang signifikan pada modal Anda.

Semua materi yang diterbitkan di Fasilitas Trading Online kami hanya untuk tujuan edukasi/informasi dan tidak boleh mengandung nasihat dan rekomendasi finansial, pajak investasi atau trading, catatan harga trading kami, penawaran, permintaan, transaksi dalam instrumen finansial apa pun atau promo finansial untuk Anda yang tidak diminta.

Konten pihak ketiga apa pun, serta konten yang disiapkan oleh XM, seperti opini, berita, riset, analisis, harga, informasi lain atau link ke situs pihak ketiga yang tersedia "sebagaimana adanya", sebagai komentar pasar umum dan bukan menjadi nasihat investasi. Sejauh konten apa pun ditafsirkan sebagai penelitian investasi, Anda harus memperhatikan dan menerima bahwa konten tersebut tidak dimaksudkan dan belum disiapkan sesuai dengan persyaratan hukum yang dirancang untuk mempromosikan kemandirian riset investasi dan dengan demikian akan dianggap sebagai komunikasi pemasaran di bawah hukum dan peraturan yang relevan. Mohon dipastikan bahwa Anda telah membaca dan memahami Notifikasi pada Riset Investasi Non-Independen dan Peringatan Risiko kami mengenai informasi di atas, yang dapat diakses disini.

Peringatan Resiko: Modal Anda beresiko. Produk dengan leverage mungkin tidak cocok bagi semua orang. Silahkan pertimbangkan Pengungkapan Resiko kami.