The Qatari Sovereign Wealth Fund is set to step up its investments as it anticipates a petrodollar windfall that could double the size of the Fund which is estimated to be over $500 billion.
Qatari Sovereign Wealth Fund
The Qatar Investment Authority (QIA) is Qatar’s sovereign wealth fund, established in 2005 to manage and grow the country’s surplus revenues from natural gas and oil exports.
It is one of the largest and most influential sovereign wealth funds globally, with investments in a broad range of asset classes and industries across the globe on behalf of the Qatari Government.
The fund holds notable assets, including Harrods department store, stakes in Canary Wharf and Heathrow Airport, and shares in major corporations such as Volkswagen and Spanish energy group Iberdrola.
Anticipated Petrodollar Windfall
The expected petrodollar windfall is a result of the country’s vast expansion of liquefied natural gas production beginning to come online. This is after the country spent almost $30bn to increase production capacity at its vast North Field gas field from 77mn to 126mn tonnes a year by 2027. Additionally, the Golden Pass joint venture in the US with ExxonMobil is expected to add another 16 to 18 tonnes of LNG a year to the market, when it comes online late next year.
These projects are projected to elevate Qatar’s real GDP by 5.7% and add approximately 3.5% of GDP in annual export receipts by 2027, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
QIA’s Strategic Vision
Mohammed Al-Sowaidi, the newly appointed CEO of the QIA, outlined plans to accelerate the fund’s investment activities. The fund intends to engage in larger, more frequent deals while refining its investment strategy to maximize returns.
“We have to be more aggressively deploying and finding ways where we could actually achieve more returns than the perceived risk.
“You review overall your allocation policies, you look into global trends and you make some calls on the future forecasts and you see how you optimize deployment,” Sowaidi said.
The fund, which has doubled its workforce since 2018, aims to enhance its deal flow, focusing on sectors such as technology, artificial intelligence, healthcare, real estate, and infrastructure.
However, Al-Sowaidi emphasized that the QIA does not seek majority control in its investments but rather aims to diversify and expand its portfolio strategically.
These strategic expansions are to help the QIA cement its status as one of the most influential sovereign wealth funds globally.