Japan’s SoftBank Group is helping companies it has invested in through its $100 billion Vision Fund to enter the Middle East, as it expands its own presence in the region with offices in Abu Dhabi and Saudi Arabia.
“We are working closely with Mubadala [Investment Company, Abu Dhabi’s sovereign wealth fund] and Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund to bring our portfolio to the region,” said Faisal Rehman, newly appointed head of the Middle East regional office at SoftBank Investment Advisers, the unit of the group that is the investment adviser for the Vision Fund. He was speaking at the FinTech Abu Dhabi event on Monday.
Mubadala is one of the largest investors in SoftBank’s Vision Fund – it pledged $15bn to the technology fund last May as part of a strategy to increase investments in high-growth sectors, such as technology, to reduce dependence on oil revenues.
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Saudi Arabia’s PIF, meanwhile, is the biggest single investor in the Vision Fund with a $45bn stake. As part of its commitment it has invested in ride-hailing app Uber and others.
Mr Rehman was appointed this summer to head up SoftBank’s newly established outpost at Abu Dhabi Global Market, the emirate’s financial centre. He will oversee the group’s planned expansion in the Middle East, alongside another recruit, Ziyad Al Ashaikh, who has been appointed to head up SoftBank’s office in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
The Middle East operations will have two main functions, Mr Rehman told Fintech Abu Dhabi. One is to facilitate the transition of Vision Fund companies to the region. Softbank is in discussions with its portfolio firms at present and five or six are currently exploring options for expanding their operations to the Middle East, according to sources.
That number is expected to grow in the coming year. “There are a number of our companies that have globally scalable models,” Mr Rehman said.
The second function is to build an awareness within SoftBank of what talent and investible propositions exist in the region, “and to leverage our network to facilitate that growth”.
SoftBank has carried out no investment or other activity in the Middle East until now. It typically injects capital worth hundreds of millions of dollars in "late-stage" companies, but there are few such companies in the region as the start-up ecosystem is still in its infancy.
However, Munish Varma, partner at SoftBank Investment Advisers based in London, told the conference SoftBank would “absolutely” write “big cheques” to Middle East-based companies should the opportunity arise.
Mr Rehman and Mr Al Ashaikh will work to grow SoftBank’s regional presence in the coming months.
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- Dr Bassam Samir Al Talhouni, Minister of Justice
- Majd Mohamed Shoueikeh, State Minister of Development of Foundation Performance
- Azmi Mahmud Mohafaza, Minister of Education and Minister of Higher Education and Scientific Research
- Falah Abdalla Al Ammoush, Minister of Public Works and Housing
- Basma Moussa Ishakat, Minister of Social Development
- Dr Ghazi Monawar Al Zein, Minister of Health
- Ibrahim Sobhi Alshahahede, Minister of Agriculture and Minister of Environment
- Dr Mohamed Suleiman Aburamman, Minister of Culture and Minister of Youth
Out
- Dr Adel Issa Al Tawissi, Minister of High Education and Scientific Research
- Hala Noaman “Basiso Lattouf”, Minister of Social Development
- Dr Mahmud Yassin Al Sheyab, Minister of Health
- Yahya Moussa Kasbi, Minister of Public Works and Housing
- Nayef Hamidi Al Fayez, Minister of Environment
- Majd Mohamed Shoueika, Minister of Public Sector Development
- Khalid Moussa Al Huneifat, Minister of Agriculture
- Dr Awad Abu Jarad Al Mushakiba, Minister of Justice
- Mounir Moussa Ouwais, Minister of Water and Agriculture
- Dr Azmi Mahmud Mohafaza, Minister of Education
- Mokarram Mustafa Al Kaysi, Minister of Youth
- Basma Mohamed Al Nousour, Minister of Culture
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