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		Exclusive: Saudi's PIF eyes investment in date producer Bateel - sources
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		 [August 08, 2019]  By 
		Hadeel Al Sayegh 
 DUBAI (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia's sovereign 
		wealth fund, the Public Investment Fund (PIF), is in talks with the 
		owners of gourmet date producer Bateel over a potential investment in 
		the firm, sources told Reuters.
 
 If a deal goes through, it could pave the way for Saudi Arabia, which is 
		heavily reliant on oil exports, to expand overseas sales of the fruit. 
		It is among the top three global producers of dates.
 
 Bateel, whose Arabic name is derived from the young offshoot of a date 
		palm, owns date groves in Al Ghat, about 250 km away from the capital 
		Riyadh, and has a chain of cafes and bakeries for gourmet food and 
		beverages.
 
 The company is owned by Saudi businessman Ziad Al Sudairy and L 
		Catterton Asia, an Asian private equity firm backed by France's LVMH 
		Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton <LVMH.PA>.
 
 Bateel's owners are in exclusive, bilateral discussions with the PIF, 
		said five banking sources with knowledge of the deal, who declined to be 
		named due to commercial sensitivities.
 
 
		
		 
		There is no process for the sale, and the size of the investment is yet 
		to be determined based on a valuation of the company and any plans the 
		PIF might have for it, the sources said.
 
 Neither the PIF, which manages about $300 billion in assets, nor Bateel 
		responded to Reuters' requests for comment. L Catterton Asia declined to 
		comment.
 
 The PIF has a strategy to help support Saudi companies become national 
		and global champions in their sectors.
 
		
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			Two merchants sit on a truck carrying boxes of dates during the 
			first international Dates Festival in the city of Buraidah, north of 
			Riyadh August 10, 2010. REUTERS/Fahad Shadeed/File Photo 
            
			 
Its investments in the Saudi food and agriculture sector include dairy group 
Almarai <2280.SE>, the Saudi Agriculture and Livestock Investment Company (SALIC), 
and the kingdom's largest food products company Savola Group <2050.SE>.
 PIF also owns a stake in Kuwaiti food company Americana Group.
 
 "This investment probably makes more sense from a cultural and economic point of 
view for the PIF than some of their other investments", said a Saudi banker 
familiar with the matter, alluding to its experience investing in the food 
sector.
 
The owners are being advised by Goldman Sachs <GS.N>, the sources said.
 Saudi Arabia is home to more than 28.5 million palm trees, according to the 
National Center for Palms and Dates.
 
 The kingdom's date exports reached 140,000 tonnes in 2017, worth 700 million 
riyals ($187 million), according to the Saudi state news agency SPA. That 
accounted for around 2% of the 4 billion riyal global market.
 
 Palm trees are visible in the Saudi emblem and coat of arms, while its fruit is 
used by Muslims to break their fast during the holy month of Ramadan.
 
 (Additional reporting by Tuqa Khalid and Saeed Azhar in Dubai and Sarah White in 
Paris; Editing by Jan Harvey)
 
				 
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