(Bloomberg) — Saudi billionaire Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal invested more than $500 million in Russian firms around the time of Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine, in a sign of the careful political position the Gulf state has maintained with its OPEC+ partner.
Most Read from Bloomberg
Prince Alwaleed’s investment firm, Kingdom Holding Co., acquired depositary receipts issued by Gazprom PSJC, Lukoil PJSC and Rosneft PJSC in February, according to a stock exchange filing. Russia invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24.
No specific dates for the investments were given, and the Saudi firm didn’t respond to questions about whether it still owned them. The value of all those depositary receipts dropped rapidly after the war began, when trading in Moscow was halted and western sanctions were imposed on Russia.
Alwaleed, whose grandfather was the founder of modern Saudi Arabia, is one of the country’s richest men and most high profile international investors. More recently he has been eclipsed by the kingdom’s sovereign wealth fund, chaired by his cousin, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, which acquired a 16.9% stake in Kingdom Holding Co. in May.
Saudi Wealth Fund Takes $1.5 Billion Stake in Alwaleed Firm
The investments highlight Saudi Arabia’s delicate relationship with Russia throughout the conflict as many of its Gulf neighbors have pulled back.
President Vladimir Putin and the kingdom’s de facto ruler Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman have spoken several times since the start of the war. Both countries have working together within the OPEC+ oil producers group to manage crude supply, largely resisted calls from Western leaders including US President Joe Biden to help tackle global inflation concerns by increasing oil output.
Ritz-Carlton
Prince Alwaleed was detained at the Saudi capital’s Ritz-Carlton hotel in 2017 along with other princes and government officials as part of what the state called an anti-corruption probe. No formal charges were ever presented, and he was released after 83 days, having reached an undisclosed “confirmed understanding” with the government.
Kingdom Holding invested 1.37 billion riyals ($365 million) in Gazprom’s American depositary receipts in February, the biggest stake of those disclosed so far this year. It also invested 196 million riyals in Rosneft’s global depositary receipts the same month, and 410 million riyals in Lukoil’s American depositary receipts between February and March.
The purchases are part of Kingdom Holding’s investment program that’s focused on alternative financing, energy, entertainment, artificial intelligence, insurance, asset management, commodities and funds.
Other Investments
The Saudi firm invested $3.4 billion in global equities and depositary receipts since 2020, based on the filing, a rare bit of disclosure by the company. The largest stake was an investment valued at 2.5 billion riyals in Spain’s Telefonica SA between April to August 2020.
It also disclosed stakes in Uber Technologies Inc., TotalEnergies SE, Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. and BHP Group Ltd., acquired mostly in 2020 and 2021. The most recent deal it disclosed was a 178 million riyal stake in Hercules Capital Inc., made in June. The venture capital firm’s shares have risen 17% since the start of July.
Prince Alwaleed, 67, became one of the highest profile Saudi investors after taking stakes in companies such as Citigroup Inc. and Apple Inc. He’s supported Prince Mohammed’s modernization efforts, including giving women the right to drive.
More recently he’s announced the sale of a stake in his Rotana Music label to Warner Music Group Corp., and he raised $2.2 billion by selling part of his stake in the Four Seasons hotel chain to Bill Gates’ Cascade Investment LLC.
Alwaleed is known for long-term investments and is a fan of famed investor Warren Buffett. He once called himself the Oracle of Omaha’s Arabian equivalent.
Read this next: Broke Oligarch Says Sanctioned Billionaires Have No Sway Over Putin
(Updates with details in fifth and sixth paragraphs)
Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek
©2022 Bloomberg L.P.
Source: finance.yahoo.com