The COVID-19 pandemic has prompted the Sovereign Fund of Egypt (SFE) to recalibrate its priorities for the sub-funds it plans to set up, with healthcare and logistics for the pharma industry currently coming to the forefront.
The SFE is also prioritizing electricity, transport, agriculture, and infrastructure for other sub-funds it’s looking to set up, CEO Ayman Soliman said in a meeting with Prime Minister Moustafa Madbouly and Planning Minister Hala El Saeed, according to a cabinet statement.
Soliman didn’t provide further details on the timeline or expected partnerships for these sub-funds.
Egypt is counting on the sovereign fund to support its ambitious development plans, and the assets owned by the SFE are estimated at about 50 billion Egyptian pounds (the dollar is approximately 15.7 Egyptian pounds).
According to the cabinet statement, the meeting discussed "the details of the projects and the timetable for their implementation," adding that there is a great desire on the part of investors to partner with the SFE, given the great flexibility of the Egyptian economy and the strength of the fund's assets, which enables them to attract foreign capital.
The SFE has been working to adapt its investment plans in tandem with the development of the pandemic.
Last month, Soliman said the fund was preparing a list of potential low-risk investments to present to investors after the outbreak, but didn’t delve into what these investments could include.
In other news, Madbouly said, during a panel discussion with a number of experts and academics on the implications of the coronavirus, that "there is a global trend now towards implementing the idea of coexistence with the virus.”
"All physicians and experts from the health sector believe that the virus will remain permanently in circulation and that we must accordingly live with it, and therefore we must adhere to all precautionary measures," Madbouly said, noting that "the negative repercussions of its global spread are currently being studied on the economic and political levels.”