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Ishac Diwan : « Trois grandes questions doivent être abordées pour relever le défi économique en Arabie saoudite »

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Ishac Diwan : « Trois grandes questions doivent être abordées pour relever le défi économique en Arabie saoudite » Empty Ishac Diwan : « Trois grandes questions doivent être abordées pour relever le défi économique en Arabie saoudite »

Post  Sirop14 Mon Apr 09, 2018 2:27 pm

Le Monde
Ishac Diwan : « Trois grandes questions doivent être abordées pour relever le défi économique en Arabie saoudite »
Le Monde 7 avr. 2018
http://www.lemonde.fr/idees/article/2018/04/07/ishac-diwan-trois-grandes-questions-doivent-etre-abordees-pour-relever-le-defi-economique-en-arabie-saoudite_5281986_3232.html

L'Obs
Arabie saoudite : "La France est inquiète de la politique impulsive de Mohammed Ben Salmane"
L'Obs il y a 9 h
https://www.nouvelobs.com/monde/20180406.OBS4745/arabie-saoudite-la-france-est-inquiete-de-la-politique-impulsive-de-mohammed-ben-salmane.html

Europe1
Mohammed Ben Salmane, un prince saoudien aux deux visages, en visite en France
Europe1 il y a 8 h
http://www.europe1.fr/international/mohammed-ben-salmane-un-prince-saoudien-aux-deux-visages-en-visite-en-france-3621497

Challenges.fr
NEOM: où en est le projet fou à 500 milliards de dollars du prince héritier d'Arabie saoudite?
Challenges.fr il y a 5 h
https://www.challenges.fr/monde/moyen-orient/neom-ou-en-est-le-projet-fou-a-500-milliards-de-dollars-du-prince-heritier-d-arabie-saoudite_579460

Oumma.com: point de vue musulman sur l'actualité
La venue à Paris de Mohammed Ben Salmane est critiquée par des manifestants opposés à la guerre au Yémen
Oumma.com: point de vue musulman sur l'actualité il y a 1 h
https://oumma.com/la-venue-a-paris-de-mohammed-ben-salmane-est-critiquee-par-des-manifestants-opposes-a-la-guerre-au-yemen/


Le Point
Le prince héritier saoudien Mohammed ben Salmane, est arrivé en France
Le Point 8 avr. 2018
http://www.lepoint.fr/monde/le-puissant-prince-heritier-saoudien-mbs-arrive-en-france-08-04-2018-2208941_24.php

L'Obs
Macron et le prince saoudien MBS parlent culture plutôt que gros contrats
L'Obs il y a 7 h
https://www.nouvelobs.com/politique/20180409.OBS4820/macron-et-le-prince-saoudien-mbs-parlent-culture-plutot-que-gros-contrats.html

Le HuffPost
Ce qu'il faut savoir de l'Arabie Saoudite de Mohammed ben Salmane pour comprendre son rôle crucial dans la région
Le HuffPost il y a 9 h
https://www.huffingtonpost.fr/nathalie-goulet/ce-quil-faut-savoir-de-larabie-saoudite-de-mohammed-ben-salmane-pour-comprendre-son-role-crucial-dans-la-region_a_23406005/


RT en français
Peu de retombées économiques à attendre de la visite de prince héritier d'Arabie saoudite ?
RT en français il y a 2 h
https://francais.rt.com/economie/49556-faibles-retombees-economiques-visite-mbs-prince-heritier

Yahoo Actualités
Le prince héritier saoudien a un faible pour l'immobilier des Yvelines
Yahoo Actualités il y a 9 h
https://fr.news.yahoo.com/prince-h%C3%A9ritier-saoudien-faible-l-immobilier-yvelines-040036132.html


Challenges.fr
La visite du prince héritier saoudien à Station F annulée
https://www.challenges.fr/top-news/la-visite-du-prince-heritier-saoudien-a-station-f-annulee_579500

Sirop14

Posts : 26727
Join date : 2008-06-02

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Ishac Diwan : « Trois grandes questions doivent être abordées pour relever le défi économique en Arabie saoudite » Empty Re: Ishac Diwan : « Trois grandes questions doivent être abordées pour relever le défi économique en Arabie saoudite »

Post  Sirop14 Mon Apr 09, 2018 3:06 pm



Comment - This is world and Europe media best at work their benchmark and when things/something terrible, the garbage they publish and the world have to eat/swallow them

We have addressed the thematic of that SIROP program and President  F Holland government approach as against Obama , the UN and EU nobody listens

The Macron government it could all have gone very terrible, the Front National secret and other French Presidential candidate nobody dares talk about they are waiting for the Sarkozy mess to repeat.

The reason the Saudi are in this mess because of that SIROP program  and its mismanagement by those very powerful and the meltdown of 2007/8 we have written

Again that program workings influencing that the current King brings in Prince Bin Salman, we have worked with two previous kings of Saudi Arabia with that SIROP program  and the information and knowledge the Prince and his staff have acquired, the debacle of those 200 prince arrested that SIROP program thematic.

From the Indian ocean and Europe, we are very concern at development with Russia, Seychelles used to be the Bastion of the USSR and Communist East Europe what it took to change this and President  F Mitterrand his many government unpublished knowledge

That SIROP have important capacity to leverage and drive important world and regional thematic depending how  they/it is manged.  We decided to use the Monument build by President  F Holland Ring of Remembrance to drive a new synergy/dynamic causing/bring about the awareness of the very grave danger the world is heading conflict between Russia , NATO,. the USA   and EU linking Britexit - we have worked and impute in such situation in the past and the impact causing the Prince Bin Salama to initiate and announce this mega NEOM project. ( We go garbage/crapped by some Illuminati recently trust they have learn their lesson and improved.) This said those who refuse to study take into consideration the special relation the Gulf Nation have with Seychelles and the why.  

Had that NEOM project not been presented the relation between Israel and the Gulf Nation and form Seychelles our views and position - we contributed that USSR let those 250,000 Jews leave Russia and the 87,000 Ethiopian debacle that SIROP program was involved the the Holocaust compensation would never have been paid had that program not existed.

The purchase of that Chateau in Paris form the Kashogi Family the workings of that SIROP program and the leverage mechanism we work

We than Facebook and many other social media for given us the voice however small and insignificant, one day people will remember and life proved we were right. Point of reference and if ever taken to Court cite and refer to them

Given USA military thematic in the Gulf region the past 30 years and Seychelles the Indian ocean and that SIROP program have  written in public urging the Prince to develop a more inclusive approach for this NEOM project meaning the greater impacts and fallout, we have cited the thematic of VP Al Gore working with that program then Clinton Administration what ensued -  with the world and /'Europe media refuse to write about until thing go very wrong . We have written to him asking that a small representation of that SIROP program is given a place office in the NEOM City  our explanation, we have indirectly impute with General Colin Powell for the era of President Reagan to the time he left office and General Schwarzkopf we know what the issues are.  Had Sir James Mancham been alive how he would have engaged and interact with the Saudi and Gulf major high parties we have worked those thematic with Sir James Mancham for more than 40 years. His friends from the Club of Rome and the Club of Paris where the information came from source -His impute and contributions even him the great Sir James Mancham the World and Europe media gave very little attention and yet.  From the Arab world and Gulf region those who know otherwise and that SIROP program capacity -

Sirop14

Posts : 26727
Join date : 2008-06-02

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Ishac Diwan : « Trois grandes questions doivent être abordées pour relever le défi économique en Arabie saoudite » Empty Re: Ishac Diwan : « Trois grandes questions doivent être abordées pour relever le défi économique en Arabie saoudite »

Post  Sirop14 Tue Apr 10, 2018 11:20 pm

‘A new force shaping the future of the global economy’: Saudi Arabia PIF chief

Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia Managing Director Yasir Al-Rumayyan pictured at the Future Investment Initiative in Riyadh. (AFP)
Updated 10 April 2018
Frank Kane
April 10, 2018
02:57
1520
$200 billion investment in KSA could give Saudi Arabia impetus to lead development of renewable energy from solar power
Yasir Al-Rumayya has mapped out how PIF would get to the $2 trillion level by 2030
New York: As the clocks ticked to midnight in New York’s Plaza Hotel, Yasir Al-Rumayyan was nearing the end of a busy day in a hectic week. But there was one event he simply had to attend, mainly because it might just involve the complete transformation of the renewable energy industry.
In the luxurious hotel’s corridors, just outside the Monroe Suite, the managing director and chief executive of Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund was waiting, along with a watchful security contingent and an expectant media pack, for the arrival of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and an announcement that everyone had been assured was “big.”
Al-Rumayyan shook some hands and took some congratulations on the successful interview he had done that afternoon with Maria Bartiromo, the anchor for Fox Business Network TV channel. He looked tired, but accomplished.
In that interview, he had once again committed PIF to becoming a “global investment powerhouse” with a staggering $2 trillion in assets under management by 2030, and when the small crowd of journalists and cameramen were shown into the presentation suite, it was obvious that the next phase toward achieving that ambition would begin that very evening.
Al-Rumayyan stood locked in contemplation alongside Khalid Al-Falih, the Saudi minister of energy, as the Crown Prince and Masayoshi Son, the founder and chief executive of Japanese hi-tech finance house SoftBank, unveiled an agreement to put Saudi Arabia, and PIF, in charge of the biggest investment ever in solar energy.
The $200 billion investment in the sun-rich Kingdom could give Saudi Arabia the impetus to lead the development of renewable energy from solar power, boost the economy with growth and thousands of jobs, and save it $40 billion a year in energy bills.
It was exactly the kind of transformational deal he had described earlier that day. “We want to enable new sectors and new industries, and make them more practical. Some of the new ideas are really great ideas, but they are not practical,” he told Bartiromo.
Just a few years ago solar energy might have fallen into the “not practical” category, but — with PIF and SoftBank’s investment — it might just be reaching the tipping point of practicality. This was what he had meant when he said: “We want to present new opportunities to reshape the global economy.”
Al-Rumayyan has been chosen as the man at the sharp financial end of the ambitious Vision 2030 strategy to transform the economy of Saudi Arabia away from oil dependency. His education in Saudi Arabia was rounded off at Harvard Business School, and the top job at PIF came after various roles with Saudi financial institutions and market authorities.
He was made managing director and chief executive of PIF just a few months after the Crown Prince took charge of the once-sleepy pensions arm for the Saudi government, and began to change it radically.
“The Crown Prince is a great visionary and he looked at the things that he thought we should be looking at, and I agreed with him totally,” said Al-Rumayyan.
Virtually everything has changed at PIF since then. It has a new ambition: To be the biggest single investor in the world measured by assets under management. It has a new investment strategy: To invest in the future. And it has a new corporate culture: To hire the best and the brightest investment minds from around the world to implement the Vision 2030 strategy.
On the first target, he mapped out how PIF would get to the $2 trillion level by 2030. “A year ago, we had $150 billion assets under management. Last September that stood at $250 billion … By 2020 we should be $400 billion and by 2030 we should be $2 trillion. So how we achieve the target is, of course, challenging, but it’s very much doable,” he said.
PIF’s Vision Realization Program commits it to higher performance targets for the 80-odd companies, of which about 20 are quoted, that are in its biggest pool of assets, the Saudi domestic funds. These had been delivering a return of 3 percent, but this has already increased to between 4 and 5 percent, Al-Rumayyan said.
“We were previously a passive investor, but now we’re more active,” he added.
The second way to help get to the $2 trillion figure is via the use of funds from the government in the form of cash from the enormous sell-off of government companies set to begin soon. “The government will keep investing capital via the proceeds of the privatization program. That is another good way to increase our assets under management,” he said, pointing out that PIF was not obliged to pay anything back to the government in dividends.
That pot would include the proceeds from the forthcoming initial public offering of Saudi Aramco, billed as the biggest single IPO in history. “So that’s a minimum of maybe $100 billion coming to us, maybe more, not depending on the valuation only, I would say, but on the size of the IPO we’ll be offering,” he said.
The third technique to get to the $2 trillion goal is through the new, aggressive investment strategy PIF has adopted under Al-Rumayyan. He reeled off a list of the biggest investments made in the past couple of years: Uber, SoftBank Vision Fund (the $100 billion hi-tech investment fund set up and managed by the Japanese bank with a $45 billion PIF investment), Blackstone, and the latest — Magic Leap, the Californian developer of “mixed reality” technology, which he called “really, a great company.”
“All these have outstanding growth rates. They are very disruptive and will add a lot of value to our portfolio,” Al-Rumayyan said.
“So, add it all up, and the $2 trillion is a conservative estimate,” he judged.
Not much else about the new PIF can be called conservative. The partnership with the hi-tech Vision Fund is central to the strategy. “Traditionally our historical portfolio was in Saudi equities and fixed income with low or even negative returns. It was all in conventional investments.
“But we see new trends coming to the future want to invest in the future, like robotics and even autonomous cars. It’s coming, it’s here. I know we had an incident recently (the fatal accident with an autonomous Uber vehicle in Arizona, US) but it’s one incident out of 30 million hours of test driving. In the grand scheme it’s really a fraction of a fraction of a percentage,” he added enthusiastically.
Data sciences will also be a focus of the new PIF strategy. “With the Internet of things, everything will be talking to everything else and the amount of data will be unprecedented. People will know what you’re buying, what you’re doing, your preferences even without you knowing about it,” he said.
Medical investment will also be to the fore. “If we’re going to have prosperity people are going to need to have greater lifespans and ages. All these things will be the focus of our investments. In addition to the greater impact it will have on our life, it is going to be lucrative,” Al-Rumayyan said.
PIF has not given up entirely on conventional investment. Al-Rumayyan pointed to the recent stake in AccorHotels as an example of investment in a fast-growing conventional business, but a much bigger focus is on infrastructure, via its $20 billion share of Blackstone’s $40-$50 billion US fund for US infrastructure.
“It needs to be upgraded. So we created the largest fund in the history of infrastructure investment. It will close in the coming month or two, and then we can start work. Streets, bridges, pipelines, tunnels, even airports — all need to be upgraded in the US and internationally. With the political will we have from the administration I think it’s a really good opportunity for us to be here,” he said.
And, of course, there are the huge infrastructure investments under way back home in Saudi Arabia. PIF is running three of the big “giga projects” — the Neom development, the Red Sea Resort and the Al Qidiya leisure complex outside Riyadh.
“Giga projects are excellent investment ideas. The growth rates in the Saudi economy will be really great and bigger than the past five years,” he said.
Managing these projects presents a challenge for PIF, which just a couple of years ago had a staff of only 40. Now, Al-Rumayyan said, it employs 240, expected to rise to 480 by the end of the year, with new offices planned in the US, London and Tokyo. This is in addition to the large number of investment bank advisers and consultants PIF uses.
One of the challenges, he said, lies in finding the right people to partner with, which he compared to being an orchestral conductor. “Sometimes the biggest challenge is to get people to play together,” he said.
But he is convinced that the world can be persuaded of the opportunities presented by the new-look Saudi Arabia.
“It is one of the most stable states in the region with 100 years of track record. Look at some of the countries around us. Some other states attract FDI but are less stable than Saudi.
“You have the history, you have the infrastructure, you have the rules and regulations, you have the enforcement of the law, especially if you look at what we’ve been doing lately with the war on corruption. We’re trying to pave the way for anybody to come in and feel comfortable that they know what it is they’re getting themselves into,” he added.
He is also convinced that the bold new Saudi world has the support of most people in the Kingdom. “Of course there is change, but it is all about positive changes and most of the people in Saudi Arabia want that. Now we’re seeing it and now we all want to participate in it. The year 2018 will be a great year for us and I think we’ll see a lot of good things,” he said.
http://www.arabnews.com/node/1281856/business-economy

Sirop14

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