Jerusalem Post
 
 
Qatar  investment spree is double-edged sword 
By DAVID ROSENBERG  / THE MEDIA LINE 
09/26/2011  13:22 

Flush with growing  revenues from gas reserves and little troubled by 
domestic unrest, Gulf country  makes high-profile investments. 
 

 
 
Flush with growing  revenues from its natural gas reserves and little 
troubled by domestic unrest  that would demand more spending at home, Qatar is 
going on a massive investment  spree that analysts say may add political and 
economic weight to this ambitious  Gulf kingdom.

But analysts warn it can also risk saddling the emirate  with losses on a 
rapidly executed and poorly strategized investment  drive.

RELATED:
_Qatar moves to reach food sustainability_ 
(http://www.jpost.com/MiddleEast/Article.aspx?id=237625) 

In the latest  of a series of high-profile investments, the Reuters news 
agency reported on  Thursday that Qatar is in talks with BNP Paribas and other 
unnamed French banks  to take equity stakes to help them raise capital to 
cover their exposure to  troubled Euro-zone debt. Baudoin Prot, chief 
executive of BNP, France’s largest  lender, denied the report, but BNP 
executives 
were reportedly touring the Gulf  in search of investment.

Holding the world’s third-largest natural-gas  reserves, Qatar’s economy 
is booming and last year pulled ahead of Luxembourg to  become the world’s 
wealthiest nation on a per capita gross domestic product  basis. The 
International Monetary Fund estimated last week that the emirate’s  GDP will 
surge 
18.7% this year, making it the world’s fastest- growing economy  for a second 
year.

Qatar is the world's largest liquefied natural gas  (LNG) exporter, able to 
produce 77 million metric tons a year of natural gas  chilled to liquid 
form. It has already begun to parley its wealth into  influence, sponsoring the 
influential Al-Jazeera television network, hosting the  2022 World Cup, and 
dispatching air force fighters to help the NATO campaign in  Libya.

“Based on their traditional values as merchants and tribes, they  are 
reaching out across the globe to invest and to shape the political scene so  
that 
they can conduct more business,” Theodore Karasik, director for research  
and development at the Institute for Near East and Gulf Military Analysis, 
told  The Media Line. “Investment in financial institutions and purchasing 
properties  is about diversifying interests. Hosting sports events and 
conferences attracts  attention to the role Qatar wants to play in regional 
security 
and business  arena.”

The flood of cash into the kingdom has enabled Qatar Investment  Authority 
(QIA), the country’s sovereign wealth fund, as well as the country’s  
private sector investors, to snap up assets in Europe, principally Britain. But 
 
the speed of the acquisitions and the lack of information on how the fund  
operates and where its assets are invested have raised concerns.


In  August, Qatar injected 500 million euros ($670 million) into a merger 
of  Eurobank EFG and Alpha, Greece’s two biggest lenders, and acquired a 160  
million-euro stake in the power company Energias de Portugal. The same 
month  Qatari Diar, the QIA’s property arm, announced it had won a bid to buy 
London’s  Olympic Village in a 557 million pound ($855 million) in a joint 
deal with the  UK developer Delancey.

In March, it bought a 6% stake in the Spanish  power company Iberdrola by 
Qatar Holding for about $2.8 billion and in May 70%  of the French soccer 
team Paris Saint-Germain. In a rare case of frustrated  ambition, QIA lost a 
bid three weeks ago to acquire the media agency that  controls the 
broadcasting rights to the FIFA World Cup.

The Gulf state’s  wealth fund contains marquee British investments, 
including luxury London  department store Harrods and stakes in Barclays Bank, 
retailer J. Sainsbury’s  and the London Stock Exchange. Qatar is said to be in 
talks with the  German government about acquiring a stake in the pan-European 
aerospace concern  European Aeronautic Defense and Space Company (EADS), 
maker of Airbus  jets.

The investment in the Greek bank merger and possible future stakes  in 
French banks position Qatar as a White Knight for financially troubled  Europe. 
And, if Qatar goes ahead with the EADS acquisitions, it will become a  
player in the world’s leading maker of civilian aircraft and upset the careful  
balance between its two biggest shareholders, the governments of France and  
Germany.

There are other calls on Qatar’s capital besides marquee  overseas 
investments. Business Monitor International expects Qatar to spend as  much as 
$100 
billion over the next five years to prepare the infrastructure for  the 2022 
World Cup. King Hamad Bin Khalifa Al-Thani has also used sovereign  wealth 
to prop up the domestic banking sector and to award public sector workers  
salary and pension raises of as much as 120%. 

But with the country of  less than one million people enjoying political 
quiet, Qatar is unlikely to pump  much more money into domestic spending. 
Indeed, said Yazan Abdeen, a fund  manager at ING Investment Bank in Dubai, the 
government risks stoking inflation  if it directs too much of its capital to 
domestic projects.

Established  just six years ago, the QIA has about $85 billion, making it 
the world’s  12th-largest sovereign wealth fund. With money pouring in from 
natural gas, the  fund is set to grow in coming years. But the Sovereign 
Wealth Institute, a Las  Vegas-based group that monitors the industry, rates 
QIA’
s transparency at 5,  about mid-way on its ranking.

“Qatar’s strutting of the world stage would  seem more savvy if the QIA 
was half as transparent about its strategy for  managing its existing wealth 
as it is for domestic development,“ Una Galani of  Reuters Breaking Views, 
said in a September 19 comment.

“Abu Dhabi, China  and Norway all provide some kind of breakdown of 
spending. As it stands, Qatar’s  investments so far look like a large 
concentration 
of risk.”

She  estimated that at least 20% of Qatar’s assets are confined to a small 
number of  purchases made over the last two years, including stakes in 
German car makers  Porsche and Volkswagen, Agricultural Bank of China, 
Santander 
Brazil, Spain’s  Iberdrola and construction firm Hochtief. 

Abdeen said Qatar’s strategy  is to take advantage of declining market 
value of financial institutions in  Europe, where the debt crisis has wreaked 
havoc of stock prices, to extend its  holdings in the sector. He said there isn
’t enough information about QIA’s  portfolio or assess what kind of risk 
the fund is taking.

“From where I  can look at it now financial sector in Europe there will be 
a lot of pain before  see gains - that’s from my perspective as an investor 
on ground,” Abdeen said.  “But the deals that offered to them are better 
than the deals that are offered  to me.” 


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