Abu Dhabi is planning to merge two of its largest sovereign investment funds as the emirate pursues a strategy of consolidation after the slump in oil prices.
The combination of International Petroleum Investment Co and Mubadala Development Company would pool assets of about $135bn and debt of about $42bn, according to Bloomberg calculations. UAE Deputy Prime Minister Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed al-Nahyan and Oil Minister Suhail al-Mazroui will be part of the committee charged with overseeing the deal, according to a statement on state-run WAM news agency yesterday.
Abu Dhabi is reining in spending as the decline in oil prices slows economic growth and plans to cut costs by combining two investment funds with common assets in areas such as energy, financial services, and healthcare. It’s the second major deal to be announced this month from the emirate after National Bank of Abu Dhabi and First Gulf Bank – its two biggest lenders – said they were in talks on a potential combination.
The deal “fits into a wider rationalisation of state owned entities, streamlining of strategy and cost saving initiatives,” said Philippe Dauba-Pantanacce, a senior economist and global political analyst at Standard Chartered in London. “The emirate is revising its previous strategy of having various separate entities representing different investment purposes.”
Mubadala has an eclectic range of assets at home and abroad. It’s the largest single investor in US semiconductor company. Advanced Micro Devices, with an 18% stake and owns 30% of Aldar Properties, Abu Dhabi’s biggest developer. It also has a 7.1% holding in First Gulf Bank. IPIC’s investments are focused on energy and petrochemical companies including Spain’s Cepsa and Vienna- based Borealis.
Abu Dhabi, which sits on 6% of global oil reserves, is planning spending cuts equal to 17% of economic output this year, according to a government bond prospectus. Economic growth will slow to 1.5% this year, from 4.3% in 2015, according to the International Monetary Fund.
The emirate may be merging the two funds after a previous plan to sell assets stalled. Mubadala was considering a sale of Swiss aircraft-maintenance business SR Technics and an initial public offering of Yahsat Satellite, people familiar with the matter said in February. It was also seeking to sell a stake in US chipmaker Globalfoundries, one of the people said.
Mubadala and Singapore’s Temasek Holdings’ sale of Dunia Finance stalled last year, people familiar have said, while IPIC held talks with banks on options including strategic partnerships, share sales and asset disposals, separate people said in October.
Energy represents potentially one of the biggest areas of overlap. IPIC and Mubadala worked jointly on a plan to build the UAE’s first land-based liquefied natural gas plant. IPIC owns a 21% stake in Japanese refiner Cosmo Oil Co and has a stake in 100,000 bpd of refining capacity together with the Pakistani government through Pak-Arab Refinery Ltd. Mubadala’s oil production is concentrated in Thailand and its Masdar renewable energy unit has solar and wind projects from Abu Dhabi to the UK.
“It makes sense to consolidate the vast range of government related entities and sovereign wealth funds, many of which have overlapping objectives,” Raza Agha, VTB Capital’s chief economist for the Middle East and Africa said. “This also opens the door for more welcome consolidation within the many entities owned by the government.”
At times, both funds have also stepped in to help struggling companies in Abu Dhabi, such as Mubadala’s acquisition of a stake in Aldar and IPIC unit Aabar’s stake in construction-firm Arabtec Holding.




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