https://arab.news/yen73
- The Public Investment Fund will establish regional investment companies in Jordan, Bahrain, Sudan, Iraq and Oman
DUBAI: The Future Investment Initiative (FII) in Riyadh drew to a close on Thursday packed with sessions for the more than 6,000 attendees in the annual event.
Plenary sessions including: 鈥淭ransforming Banking and Investment for the Resilient Economy;鈥� 鈥淚nvesting For Global Impact鈥�; 鈥淰C: Economic Rocket Launchers鈥�; 鈥淐hina Is Back鈥�; and 鈥淢odernizing Mining鈥� were lined with speakers from leading decisionmakers, policymakers and investors, among others.
Wednesday鈥檚 highlights included Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman鈥檚 announcement that the Public Investment Fund would establish regional investment companies in Jordan, Bahrain, Sudan, Iraq and Oman.
Oil giant Aramco also announced the launch a $1.5 billion sustainability fund to invest in stable and inclusive energy transition technology, while ACWA Power chairman Mohammed Abunayyan said 黑料社区 was set to become the world鈥檚 biggest green energy producer.
An aviation expert meanwhile told Arab News that the Kingdom鈥檚 travel industry will witness significant growth and is projected to reach $100 billion by 2032.
On the economic front, 黑料社区鈥檚 finance minister Mohammed Al-Jadaan said that the world was going to witness a very difficult six months from now as economic challenges such as high-interest rates and inflation persist in almost all countries.
As it happened: The following are live updates on the highlights of the final day at FII 6th edition. (All timings are GMT)
17:00 - With more than 6,000 of the world鈥檚 business leaders, policymakers, investors, entrepreneurs and tech experts, the 6th edition of the Future Investment Initiative proclaiming 黑料社区鈥檚 investment might and transforming business environment concluded in Riyadh on Thursday.
Thank you for joining us for the week, be sure to join us again for the next instalment of FII!
16:15 - The surge in foreign investment in 黑料社区 is a welcome sight, according to Nicolas Dufourcq, CEO of the French public investment bank Bpifrance.
Talking to Arab News on the sidelines of the Future Investment Initiative forum in Riyadh, DuFourq said: 鈥淚 was very happy to see here for the first time, fresh entrepreneurs coming to 黑料社区 to invest in 黑料社区, and not only to get funds for their ventures in Europe."
15:30 - In an interview with Arab News on the sidelines of the Future Investment Initiative forum in Riyadh, Yasser Abuatek 鈥� head of Umm Al Qura For Development and Construction 鈥� said 鈥楳asar Destination鈥� is already 88 percent complete in terms of infrastructure, adding it was set to have 24,000 hotel rooms completed by the end of 2023.
14:20 - Environmental, social and governance policies have become politicized as a certain section of the community view it with a woke bias against financial companies, a senior official of a leading US-based global litigation firm has claimed.
13:40 - General Electric will test green-hydrogen-powered gas turbines in Egypt at the 27th UN Climate Change Conference in November, revealed the company鈥檚 president and CEO.
12:11 - 黑料社区鈥檚 Export-Import Bank is set to open two offices in Africa in 2023, as it plans exports worth SR1.5 billion ($400 million) through these centers.
0952: Public Investment Fund-owned real estate company ROSHN is looking to triple its building rate as it seeks to become the biggest residential developer in the Gulf Cooperation Council region by 2025, according to its CEO David Grover.
0937: 黑料社区鈥檚 tourism sector is on course to contribute 10 percent of the Kingdom鈥檚 gross domestic product within a decade, according to Gloria Guevara, chief special advisor to the Minister of Tourism.
0922: The Public Investment Fund has launched a Local Content Growth Program aiming at growing competition and innovation in the private sector.
Saleh Romeih, managing partner and head of operations for EMEA of SoftBank Vision Fund: 鈥淚nnovation comes from many different parts of the world today. It used to be the Valley, Berlin, London. But today innovation comes from all over the place, what I call the capillaries of the world. India for example, that is a huge area. Here in the Kingdom itself, we have some investments in common鈥� the good news is that is innovation coming from the pockets of the world and I think it is important for us investors to be present in these capillaries to pick up on these innovations. I think the other lesson we have learned is that鈥� we coexisted for many years in a system of globalization where there was interdependence between different regions. That today I think is gonna get challenged given where geopolitics is headed.鈥�
鈥淲e have a new paradigm where money is not free anymore. Since 2008 we enjoyed zero interest rates for very long, effectively it means capital was free鈥� I think many investors lost a bit of discipline in employing that capital and the companies themselves did not have to work that hard.鈥�
Christine Tsai, CEO of 500 Global: 鈥淲e have seen a very significant shift in the center of gravity [in the MENA region]. Our first investment into a Saudi company was 2016, and over the years we have been investing further into the Kingdom鈥� while continue to invest throughout the region, we see much potential with 黑料社区, we worked closely with partners like Sanabil who鈥檚 been instrumental in developing the startup ecosystem here. In terms of the potential, we to-date have invested in over 60 Saudi companies and we only see it growing further, especially because of the deal flow that we see at the early stages. There has been tremendous support from the Kingdom itself to spur this entrepreneurship at all levels. What we have seen both here as well as in our work in emerging markets and mature markets around the world is that to build a very sustainable venture ecosystem it takes multiple parties.鈥�
鈥淚n terms of our global approach, we see our efforts in the Kingdom and broadly in the MENA region, only increasing and we only hope to see more and more unicorns. We do see big outcomes happening here.鈥�
Dr. Hani Enaya, CIO of Sanabil Investments: 鈥淚f you look at the year that followed the global financial crisis, it produced one of the best ventures in the VC market, and as a matter of fact of what鈥檚 happening on these markets today is very healthy decalibration. And if you look at the data, the first two quarters of this year, the funds raised are similar amount almost to what they raised a year ago. Something interesting is happening, so the dollar amount is healthy but actually much fewer funds raised that money, so there is much more consolidation happening.鈥�
Prince Khaled Bin Al-Waleed Bin Talal Al-Saud, founder and CEO of KBW Ventures: 鈥淰enture is absolutely not going anywhere. Venture is the stepping stone of everything innovation鈥� we have seen a number of increased amounts of innovation happening in the past years, and in the next years to come. As a matter of fact there is more dry powder or more capital on the sidelines from venture funds than ever before seen and I think now is the time and the next few months to actually capitalize, save up a lot of capital to really invest in the next economic downtrend that we are having. And the best time to invest really is after an economic downturn.鈥�
鈥淰enture is the foundation of everything that is going to evolve from there when it comes to growth capital or when it comes to going IPO and the natural rounds of investing. For me there is more money being invested in the venture world鈥� there is more money being invested in venture in the first three quarters of this year than the entire last year. Venture is definitely still there.鈥�
0741: Plenary on VC: Economic Rocket Launchers with Prince Khaled Bin Al-Waleed Bin Talal Al-Saud, founder and CEO of KBW Ventures; Dr. Hani Enaya, CIO of Sanabil Investments; Dr. Klaus Hommels, founder and CEO of Lakestar; Saleh Romeih, managing partner and head of operations for EMEA of SoftBank Vision Fund; GV Ravishankar, managing director at Sequoia Capital India & SEA and Christine Tsai, CEO of 500 Global.
Dr. Rodrigo Tavares, founder and CEO of Granito Group: 鈥淚mpact investing is about investing in companies whose products and services generate positive social environmental impact, and that impact needs to be measured.鈥�
鈥淭here is no good investments without integrating ESG. It is irresponsible, it is unsophisticated, it is unprofessional. ESG is a set-up of characteristics emanating from the financial assts that investors need to incorporate into their traditional investment making to allocate resources. Not doing that would be a violation of the fiduciary duties. ESG is not necessary about saving the planet, doing good, it is mostly about impact investing.鈥�
Brian Hook, vice chairman for global investments at Cerberus, on the Abraham Accords: 鈥淲hat we are seeing here [in the region] is nothing short of an economic, cultural and social transformation. In 黑料社区, and in the Gulf broadly, I think this is one of the most economically dynamic regions of the world today and that is going to continue. You see increased people-to-people ties, greater privatization in a number of Gulf economies. The Abraham Accords has unlocked investment opportunities that we have been hoping for I think some time. In 2021, you had $2 billion in trade between Abraham Accords countries. In UAE and Israel it is a 163% increase in trade since August two years ago鈥� the economic benefits have been significant, that is going to continue. For companies and firms that want to make an impact鈥� think this is the region where you will make the biggest impact, where there is the greatest opportunity. The leadership in the Gulf is transformative.鈥�
Jacques-Phillipe Piverger, CEO of Goodlight Capital: 鈥淸With respect to impact investing], there is a high correlation between purpose and high returns in investments and in terms of mitigating risk. If you look at the last couple of years where there was significant dislocations relating to the economy, if you are simply investing in companies that are bottomline driven and are not solving for things that are of consequence, they鈥檙e gonna be more exposed to risks and challenges.鈥�
鈥淚nvestors should start really start to think of impact, has something that correlates highly with performance as opposed to something that might be concessionary.鈥�
0700: Plenary on Investing For Global Impact with Brian Hook, vice chairman for global investments at Cerberus; Jenny Lee, managing partner at GGV Capital; Jacques-Phillipe Piverger, CEO of Goodlight Capital and Dr. Rodrigo Tavares, CEO and founder of Granito Group.
Samer Haj-Yehia, chairman of Bank Leumi: 鈥淭he fintech industry is on the rise, the economy is healthy unlike other economies around the world鈥� the prospects for the future are very good. If you look at the regulations which are fundamental for the banking sector in particular, the regulators are giving the tailwind to support the change.鈥�
Charles Schaf, CEO of Wells Fargo: 鈥淭his time of disruption in financial services, that is the new normal and we鈥檙e far from done in all of this. If we think back to what happened in the past 10-15 years, aside from the economic disruption, and you think about the rise of blockchain, crypto, direct lending, all of the technology companies entering financial services, the fintech community themselves鈥� the landscape, it is not clear who the winners and losers are. If we think what the future looks like, this battle is just beginning, and will be a great battle between established financial institutions, the government in some parts of the world as they figure out the role the want to play, the fintech community鈥� and the technology players.鈥�
Saad Bin Abdulaziz Al-Khalb, CEO of Saudi Exim Bank: 鈥淭he main mandate of eximbanks and ECAs [export credit agencies] is to provide facilities to development financial institutions owned by government to support global trades and export activities. The main mandate is to support [the] economy and flow of goods, trades, and infrastructure and long-term projects. So if there is any downturn in economy, pandemic, geopolitical tension, climate change or a significant hike of rates that we are seeing on a very short period of time, this is where ECAs, eximbanks have to step in and support flow of trade and cross-border transactions. We were started in February 2020, exactly in the pandemic year and since then we have approved about SR20 billion to support Saudi exporters.鈥�
鈥淚t is part of the core headline of Saudi Vision 2030, to make 黑料社区 a central logistic hub to support the world. All the other strategies has to be made so we have the roadmap for the future, we know what we are gonna do and the logistic strategy, the expected investment is SR40 billion in the next three years that will require financing from financial institutions and ECAs locally and globally.鈥�
Samer Haj-Yehia, chairman of Bank Leumi: 鈥淚 think the entire banking system is going through significant evolution. When you analyze the banking sector, you at look at two evolutions; one is the technology and one is the business. What you see now is the vast majority of the fintech and innovation are actually happening in the emerging markets in general and in the Middle East in particular. And that is the green field and blue ocean for investment.鈥�
鈥淚f you look at for example Africa you have the high-tech startups tripled to 5,200 between 2021, and half of that is from fintech. The economy here is thriving and you have significant programs for 2030 well under execution. The GDP is growing, it鈥檚 12.2 percent here in Saudi [Arabia] which is one of the highest in the world, with low inflation at 3.1 percent so there is a lot to do here from a GDP perspective which is coupled with the banking industry.鈥�
鈥淭hat together, when you look at the population that is growing, with a high percentage of youth that is tech savvy, you have a high penetration of mobile, and there are a number of places that are underbanked. So potential here is huge.鈥�
Francois Wat, partner at Rothschild & Company: 鈥淲e are seeing some dramatic changes in our industry, the volume of online and digital banking has increased by more than 50% pre COVID-19 and post COVID-19. So by definition the activity is moving online very quickly. It is interesting for us to see competition鈥� the number of players in the system has increased dramatically and it would be interesting to see how that will consolidate... I would expect traditional banks and the big banks to benefit from these trends by maybe trying to consolidate some of the market to incorporate a lot of these financial innovations within their own products.鈥�
Dame Susan Rice, chairwoman of GEFI Global Steering Group: 鈥淭he resilience of [UK banks], the testing of difficult scenarios sometimes out to 100 years, I mean extraordinarily challenging requirements for a bank and the institutions are kept to these so I feel and I know鈥� that the system is really quite strong. But however strong it is that does not mean something might come along or several things come along, we often think in linear ways鈥� I think the resilience is there and the desire to be resilient because no one wants to go through what happened in the financial crisis.鈥�
鈥淲hen the economy becomes very difficult and challenging probably the most important thing for them (clients) and for our institutions and I would sum it up in one word is the word trust. If we can demonstrate that we understand that the pressures and the issues of the customer and they continue to trust us that is really good. If they don鈥檛, they will turn to others who are less regulated or less experienced or less well-financed and they will get into trouble, both businesses and people, so it鈥檚 important that we keep our customers with us as institutions. That is an important factor.鈥�
鈥淸On] crypto and digital banking, we are never going back to running to a branch to get some money, we are well past that. But if you think of the history of money, it starts with exchanges in kind鈥� and went into paper and then into plastic. In a way crypto is another iteration there and then again it is a matter of trust that we have ways to protect customers from anything untoward that might happen to them.鈥�
Tong Li, CEO and executive president at BOC International Holdings Limited: 鈥淲ith the increasing popularity of mobile internet technology and the rapid growth of financial media industry, more and more individual investors have been tapping into capital market with a lower transaction cost and higher information availability through wireless online platforms. I see this trend as inevitable. I tend to view the impact of this trend, the long run would be positive, it will boost the market transparency鈥� this in the long run will benefit the economic growth.鈥�
Charles Schaf, CEO of Wells Fargo: 鈥淲e still see extraordinary strength across our consumer businesses and our corporate businesses of all sizes. We see a little bit of stress in those with less affluence and those in industries that are particularly inflation affected, but it is really a very, very small piece of the overall customer base. What we are all concerned about and what we think is inevitable is very, very different than what we are seeing.鈥�
鈥淥ur hope is that the measured impact that people will be able to work through because the known direction of travel will help to ease the strain that they will see. It鈥檚 possible that the significant changes the cumulative impact of that can have a much bigger impact, as well as the course of geopolitical events which could certainly change everything, but we just have to separate what we see in the markets versus what we see in the real economy. And today appropriately incredibly nervous but the real economy is still particularly strong.鈥�
Charles Schaf, on the American banking system: 鈥淭he [US financial] institutions are so much stronger today than they were pre-financial crisis. And it not just capital levels, we all talk about capital levels going from 6%, 7%, 8% to 10%, 11%, 12%, 13% and for some institutions still heading higher which we are able to achieve and still continue to support the marketplace鈥� the banks per se are still in really great shape.鈥�
Saad Bin Abdulaziz Al-Khalb, CEO of Saudi Exim Bank: 鈥淓ximbanks are an integral part of financial systems, where they are strategic partners of commercial financial institutions supporting their credit offering ang mitigating financial risks and cross-border and long-term transactions.鈥�
鈥淥ur main objective is to ensure that no Saudi export cross-border transaction fails due to lack of insurance or financing.鈥�
0612: Plenary on Transforming Banking And Investment For The Resilient Economy with Saad Bin Abdulaziz Al-Khalb, CEO of Saudi Exim Bank; Charles Schaf, CEO of Wells Fargo; Tong Li, CEO and executive president at BOC International Holdings Limited; Frederic Oudea, CEO at Soci茅t茅 G茅n茅rale; Dr. Samer Haj-Yehia, chairman of Bank Leumi; Francois Wat, partner at Rothschild & Company and Dame Susan Rice, chairwoman of GEFI Global Steering Group.