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						Qatar revamps investment strategy after Kushner building 
						bailout
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		 [February 11, 2019]   
		By Dmitry Zhdannikov, Herbert Lash and Saeed Azhar 
 LONDON/NEW YORK/DUBAI (Reuters) - When news 
		emerged that Qatar may have unwittingly helped bail out a New York 
		skyscraper owned by the family of Jared Kushner, Donald Trump's 
		son-in-law, eyebrows were raised in Doha.
 
 Kushner, a senior White House adviser, was a close ally of Saudi Crown 
		Prince Mohammed bin Salman - a key architect of a regional boycott 
		against Qatar, which Riyadh accuses of sponsoring terrorism. Doha denies 
		the charge.
 
 Brookfield, a global property investor in which the Qatari government 
		has placed investments, struck a deal last year that rescued the Kushner 
		Companies' 666 Fifth Avenue tower in Manhattan from financial straits.
 
 The bailout, in which Doha played no part and first learned about in the 
		media, has prompted a rethink of how the gas-rich kingdom invests money 
		abroad via its giant sovereign wealth fund, two sources with knowledge 
		of the matter told Reuters.
 
		
		 
		
 The country has decided that the Qatar Investment Authority (QIA) will 
		aim to avoid putting money in funds or other investment vehicles it does 
		not have full control over, according to the sources, who are familiar 
		with the QIA's strategy.
 
 "Qatar started looking into how its name got involved into the deal and 
		found out it was because of a fund it co-owned," said one of the 
		sources. "So QIA ultimately triggered a strategy revamp."
 
 The QIA declined to comment.
 
 Canada's Brookfield Asset Management Inc bailed out 666 Fifth Avenue via 
		its real estate unit Brookfield Property Partners, in which the QIA 
		acquired a 9 percent stake five years ago. Both parent and unit declined 
		to comment.
 
 The QIA's strategic shift was made late last year, according to the 
		sources. It offers a rare insight into the thinking of one of the 
		world's most secretive sovereign wealth funds.
 
 The revamp could have significant implications for the global investment 
		scene because the QIA is one of the world's largest state investors, 
		with more than $320 billion under management.
 
 The wealth fund has poured money into the West over the past decade, 
		including rescuing British and Swiss banks during the 2008 financial 
		crisis and investing in landmarks like New York's Plaza Hotel and the 
		Savoy Hotel and Harrods store in London.
 
 QATARI BOYCOTT
 
 Kushner was chief executive of Kushner Companies when it acquired 666 
		Fifth Avenue in 2007 for $1.8 billion, a record at the time for a 
		Manhattan office building. It has been a drag on his family's real 
		estate company ever since.
 
 The debt-laden skyscraper was bailed out by Brookfield last August, when 
		it took a 99-year lease on the property, paying the rent for 99 years 
		upfront. Financial terms were not disclosed.
 
		
		 
		
 The QIA bought a 9 percent stake in Brookfield Property Partners, which 
		is known as BPY and is listed in Toronto and New York, for $1.8 billion 
		in 2014.
 
 BPY has about $87 billion in assets, part of more than $330 billion 
		managed by its parent Brookfield. The stake purchase by QIA was in line 
		with its strategy to boost investments in prime U.S. property. The 
		investment gave QIA no seat on the board of BPY.
 
 The Qatari wealth fund was not involved in the 666 Fifth Avenue deal, a 
		source close to Brookfield Asset Management told Reuters. There was no 
		requirement for Brookfield to inform the QIA beforehand.
 
 The rescue rankled with Doha, according to the two sources familiar with 
		the QIA's strategy, because Kushner - married to U.S. President Trump's 
		daughter Ivanka - had long been one of the key supporters in Washington 
		of the Saudi crown prince, who is the king's favorite son and heir to 
		the throne.
 
		
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			U.S. President Donald Trump, flanked by White House senior advisor 
			Jared Kushner, meets with Saudi Arabia's Deputy Crown Prince 
			Mohammed bin Salman at the Ritz Carlton Hotel in Riyadh, Saudi 
			Arabia May 20, 2017. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst 
            
			 
Prince Mohammed was a prime mover in leading regional states to severing links 
with its neighbor Qatar and embargoing the small nation since mid-2017. Saudi 
Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt and Bahrain accuse Qatar of sponsoring 
terrorism. Doha denies the allegation and says the other countries simply want 
to strip it of its sovereignty. 
"There is no upside in investing through funds for someone like QIA. Qatar wants 
full visibility into where its money goes," said the second source familiar with 
the QIA's strategy.
 The QIA will not wind down existing investments with Brookfield or others, but 
will rather no longer invest in similar deals, according to the two sources.
 
 The source close to Brookfield said relations with QIA were still strong.
 
STILL GOING BIG
 The QIA's strategic revamp also followed a reshuffle at the top of the fund last 
November when its long-serving chief, Sheikh Abdullah bin Mohamed bin Saud al-Thani, 
was replaced by its former head of risk management, Mansour Ibrahim al-Mahmoud. 
Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani was named QIA 
chairman.
 
 Qatar, whose wealth comes from the world's largest exports of liquefied gas, 
does not provide data on how much money it places with external fund managers.
 
 "What we have seen lately is that it has have not been placing much," said a 
Western fund manager who regularly sources money from wealth funds. "Either they 
are investing themselves or they are just sitting on a lot of cash."
 
 
  
The Qatar shift in its approach reflects a wider trend among sovereign wealth 
funds to reduce reliance on external investment managers, in an attempt to keep 
tighter control over their money.
 The Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, for example, said last year that 55 percent 
of its assets were managed by external managers in 2017, down from 60 percent 
the year before.
 
 Yet, even if the QIA is being more cautious in its choice of investment 
vehicles, there is little indication that its appetite for big international 
acquisitions has diminished.
 
 In December, new QIA chief Mahmoud told Reuters the fund was focusing on 
"classic" investments in the West such as real estate and financial 
institutions, and would also accelerate investment in technology and healthcare.
 
 "The instructions from the top are to go out and do big deals," said a Western 
banker who has held talks with Qatari officials.
 
 He said QIA's dealmaking had not stopped even during the height of the Gulf 
embargo, which initially forced the fund to put in about half of the $43 billion 
injected by public-sector firms into Qatari banks to mitigate the impact of 
outflows.
 
 With oil and gas prices growing over the past two years, Qatar has not departed 
from what it is best known for - snapping up big-names properties.
 
 In 2017, QIA pledged to ramp up its investments in Britain to 35 billion pounds 
($45 billion) from 30 billion. Since then, it has spent about 1.7 billion pounds 
on real estate and another 1.1 billion on infrastructure in the country.
 
 In recent months, Qatar has bought New York's Plaza and London's Grosvenor House 
hotels.
 
 (Additional reporting by Eric Knecht; Writing by Dmitry Zhdannikov; Editing by 
Pravin Char)
 
				 
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