Saudi PIF Considers Bidding for Qatar's Ooredoo Tower Unit

Public Investment Fund (PIF) is considering a final bid for Ooredoo network towers (QNA)
Public Investment Fund (PIF) is considering a final bid for Ooredoo network towers (QNA)
TT
20

Saudi PIF Considers Bidding for Qatar's Ooredoo Tower Unit

Public Investment Fund (PIF) is considering a final bid for Ooredoo network towers (QNA)
Public Investment Fund (PIF) is considering a final bid for Ooredoo network towers (QNA)

Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund (PIF) is considering a final bid for network towers sold by Qatari telecom firm Ooredoo.

According Bloomberg, informed sources said the PIF expressed its keenness to be among the suitors for the Qatari telecom and submit offers for the final purchase competing with American Tower Corp, IHS Holding, and Helios Towers.

Ooredoo announced its revenues at the end of October amounting to $2.4 billion, a four percent increase compared to last year.

Capital spending during the period amounted to $1.6 billion, while free cash flow increased three percent and reached $800 million, driven in particular by a decrease in capital spending.

Last August, Ooredoo launched its new brand positioning and tagline, "Upgrade Your World," which revolves around enabling human progress, reflecting the company's commitment to improving and never standing still.

In September, the group signed an agreement to sell its Myanmar unit to Singapore vehicle Nine Communications, with an enterprise value of $576 million, subject to the customary closing conditions, including Myanmar regulatory approvals.

Earlier, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman recently announced that PIF had established five regional companies in Arab countries, with a value of $24 billion, to contribute to supporting innovative initiatives and stimulating the capabilities of regional countries.

Prince Mohammed, the PIF Chairman, announced that the Fund would establish five companies to invest in Bahrain, Iraq, Jordan, Oman, and Sudan.

The Fund disclosed its plans during the second day of the sixth edition of the Future Investment Initiative recently held in Riyadh, in the presence of a group of investors, innovators, and world leaders.

The companies aim to invest up to $24 billion in opportunities across various key sectors in each market.

The companies will invest in various vital sectors, including but not limited to infrastructure, real estate development, mining, healthcare, financial services, food and agriculture, manufacturing, telecoms, and technology, among other strategic sectors and industries in each country.

The establishment of the five new companies will contribute to an increase in regional investment opportunities for PIF's portfolio companies and Saudi Arabia's private sector, bolstering attractive financial returns over the long term and creating more avenues for strategic economic collaboration with the private sector in the target countries as well as enabling the Saudi private sector.



Lebanon Appoints Karim Souaid as New Central Bank Governor

A woman walks outside of Lebanon's Central Bank building in Beirut, Lebanon March 16, 2018. REUTERS/Mohamed Azakir/File Photo
A woman walks outside of Lebanon's Central Bank building in Beirut, Lebanon March 16, 2018. REUTERS/Mohamed Azakir/File Photo
TT
20

Lebanon Appoints Karim Souaid as New Central Bank Governor

A woman walks outside of Lebanon's Central Bank building in Beirut, Lebanon March 16, 2018. REUTERS/Mohamed Azakir/File Photo
A woman walks outside of Lebanon's Central Bank building in Beirut, Lebanon March 16, 2018. REUTERS/Mohamed Azakir/File Photo

Lebanon on Thursday named asset manager Karim Souaid as its new central bank governor. He will be expected to restructure the banking sector and fairly distribute losses from Lebanon's 2019 financial collapse, which erased the savings of ordinary Lebanese, tanked the currency and sparked an economic crisis.

In announcing Souaid's appointment, Prime Minister Nawaf Salam urged the new governor to focus on talks with the International Monetary Fund, restructuring banks, tightening banking secrecy laws and prioritizing depositors' rights.

"The governor, whoever he is and whatever the reservations about his selection, must commit from today to the financial policies of our reformist government," Salam said following a cabinet vote on the appointment.

Souaid, who holds a degree from Harvard Law School and founded asset management firm GrowthGate Capital in 2007, won the support of 17 ministers in the 24-member cabinet, two sources with direct knowledge of the vote told Reuters.

Salam and President Joseph Aoun have both pledged to prioritize reforms to help secure funds desperately needed to kickstart the economy and rebuild the country following the recent war between Israel and Hezbollah.

But they were split over who to appoint as central bank governor, with Aoun backing Souaid and Salam against him, according to two Lebanese government officials, two sources familiar with the dispute and a Western diplomat.

The incoming governor will replace interim chief Wassim Mansouri, who has been overseeing the bank since longer-serving governor Riad Salameh's tenure ended in disgrace in 2023 due to the financial implosion.

In the wake of the crisis, Lebanon was placed on a financial watchdog's "grey list" for failing to address concerns about terrorism financing and money laundering through its financial system.