Saudi sees deals worth $50 billion at
investment conference despite boycotts
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[October 23, 2018]
By Andrew Torchia, Rania El Gamal and Marwa Rashad
RIYADH (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia was set to
sign deals worth $50 billion on Tuesday at the opening of an investment
conference despite being overshadowed by the killing of journalist Jamal
Khashoggi which prompted a boycott by Western politicians, top world
bankers and company executives.
Energy Minister Khalid al-Falih told a panel that the world's largest
oil exporter was passing through a "crisis of a sort" but would power
ahead with economic diversification plans.
"Nobody in the kingdom can justify it (Khashoggi's killing) or explain
it," he said.
Speaking at the opening session, Saudi businesswoman Lubna Olayan
described the killing of the dissident Saudi journalist which has
sparked a global outcry and strained Riyadh's ties with the West as
"alien to our culture".
"It is natural that our thoughts tend to focus on recent events
surrounding the death of Jamal Khashoggi ... may he rest in peace," she
said.
Hundreds of bankers and company executives joined officials at a
palatial Riyadh hotel for the Future Investment Initiative. But while
last year's inaugural conference drew the global business elite, this
year's event has been marred by the pullout of more than two dozen
high-level speakers.
Khashoggi, a critic of Saudi Arabia's crown prince, vanished after he
entered its consulate in Istanbul on Oct 2. After first denying any
involvement in his disappearance, Riyadh on Saturday said Khashoggi died
during a fight in the consulate. Later, a Saudi official attributed the
death to a chokehold.
Turkey's president said in parliament in Ankara on Tuesday that there
was strong evidence the killing was savage and planned. He said he was
not satisfied with Riyadh placing the blame on some of its intelligence
agents.
Many foreign investors see a risk that the Khashoggi case, which drew
global condemnation, could damage Riyadh's ties with Western
governments. Saudi Arabia's stock index was down 1.7 percent in
afternoon trading on persistent investor concern.
U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and senior ministers from Britain
and France pulled out of the event along with chief executives or
chairmen of about a dozen big financial firms such as JP Morgan Chase
and HSBC, and International Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde.
NEW DEALS
However, Saudi Arabia is set to sign deals worth more than $50 billion
on the opening day in the oil, gas, industries and infrastructure
sectors with firms such as Trafigura, Total, Hyundai, Norinco,
Schlumberger, Halliburton and Baker Hughes.
Oil giant Saudi Aramco said it signed 15 memoranda of understandings
worth $34 billion.
Total Chief Executive Patrick Pouyanné, a panelist on Tuesday, said the
French oil and gas producer would announce a retail network in the
kingdom with Saudi Aramco.
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Participants attend the investment conference in Riyadh, October 23,
2018. REUTERS/Faisal Al Nasser
Russia sent a large delegation led by Direct Investment Fund head Kirill
Dmitriev, who said Saudi Arabia's economic transformation was "important
for the world" and that partnerships between sovereign wealth funds was
a "great opportunity".
The managing director of the kingdom's sovereign wealth fund, the
main backer of the event, said the country was becoming more
transparent and that the Saudi Public Investment Fund continued to
develop new industries under economic reforms launched by Crown
Prince Mohammed bin Salman.
Yasir al-Rumayyan said the fund has invested in 50 or 60 firms via
SoftBank Group's Vision Fund and would bring most of those
businesses to the kingdom. PIF has committed to invest $45 billion
in Vision Fund.
Many Western banks and other companies, fearful of losing business
such as fees from arranging deals for Saudi Arabia's $250 billion
sovereign wealth fund, sent lower-level executives even as their top
people stayed away.
Top executives of Asian firms have been hesitant to pull out, so the
participation of Chinese and Japanese institutions may help Riyadh
claim the three-day conference as a success.
For these reasons, the Western boycott may have little long-term
impact on Saudi economic prospects.
Foreigners sold a net 4.01 billion riyals ($1.07 billion) of Saudi
equities last week, by far the biggest pull-out of overseas money
since the stock market opened to direct foreign investment in
mid-2015.
The event is being held at the Ritz-Carlton in Riyadh, where scores
of princes, businessmen and officials were detained in a crackdown
on corruption soon after last year's conference ended.
Authorities said the crackdown extracted over $100 billion from
suspects in financial settlements. But that figure has not been
verified, and details of the alleged crimes were never made public,
fuelling investors' concern about legal transparency.
(Reporting by Andrew Torchia, Stephen Kalin, Marwa Rashad and Rania
El Gamal; Writing by Ghaida Ghantous; Editing by Michael Georgy,
Andrew Heavens, Richard Balmforth)
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