Qatar Investment Authority chief warns banks to open up

The Qatar Investment Authority (QIA) is looking closely at taking stakes in banks across the US, Europe and Asia but its chief executive, prime minister, Sheik Hamad Al-Thani, warns banks to be open if they want to have meaningful relationships with sovereign wealth funds.

The $US60 billion QIA already has stakes in Credit Suisse and Barclays and Al-Thani said he was looking at further opportunities in Europe.

In an interview with CNN, Al-Thani said the QIA had learned about transparency the hard way, having been in talks to buy a stake in an un-named US bank only to find the next day it was bankrupt.

“It is very important that banks should be responsible when talking to sovereign funds if they want them to participate in their economy, that they tell them exactly the situation,” he said. “That is why most sovereign wealth funds are very scared right now.”

Al-Thani said he was fundamentally against nationalisation of banks because “it takes the confidence from the market”.

Sponsored Content

In addition to banks, Al-Thani said he would look at blue chips across all industries and when the time and entry level were right, QIA would act.

The QIA was founded in 2005 to build up a diversified asset base to complement the country’s wealth of natural resources. In addition to listed securities, it also invests in property, alternative assets and private equity.

In 2007 Qatar had GDP of more than $US63 billion, a per capita income of $US67,000 and a real growth rate of 12.5 per cent. Oil accounts for more than 60 per cent of total government revenue, it the country is the largest producer of liquefied natural gas and its gas reserves are the third largest in the world.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Warren Buffett’s excellent adventure

'Youngster’ Warren Buffett (85) rebuffed risks from sugar and climate change as he toured the American economy with his ‘older’ offsider, Charlie Munger (92), presenting at the Berkshire Hathaway AGM .

Pay for performance

Pension fund executive pay varies widely around the globe, with differences based on internal management and alternatives exposures. Amanda White examines pension fund executive pay.

A long way to go

It’s all very well to have diversity, but most people lack the tools for how to get the best out of a diverse team. Instead the reverse is true and diversity can lead to an unlevel playing field.

Too much of a good thing

Experts at the Thinking Ahead Institute outline the pitfalls of implementing team diversity, , when too much diversity fails us, and how organisations can be champions for change.

Income the key dimension

Risk should be defined as the inability to meet retirement income goals, so investors and their managers should forget alpha and other “distractions”, according to David Booth.

Worlds colliding

The debate about the effect of pay inequality on both the financial and real-world markets is about to get a whole lot hotter this year.

Previous