Kuwait Triples Investment in Japan, Highlighting Sovereign Wealth Flight From U.S. Assets
Source: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/USMoneyMorning/~3/356817765/Posted on Tuesday, August 5th, 2008 | In Investing in Kuwait, Japan, Market Commentary
By Jason Simpkins
Associate Editor
The Kuwait Investment Authority (KIA), the oil-rich nation’s sovereign wealth fund, is planning to triple its investment in Japan to $48 billion, highlighting a global investment shift away from U.S. assets.
The Kuwait sovereign wealth fund already has $15 billion to $16 billion invested in Japan, but Kuna, the nation’s state news agency, quoted Finance Minister Mustapha al-Shamali, as saying that the “KIA has an intention to double or triple its investment in the Japanese market.”
That investment boost would follow Japan’s recent agreement with Kuwait to reduce – or end – double taxation on interest, dividends, and capital gains. Japan has similar agreements with about 60 countries, but the deal with Kuwait is the Asian nation’s first with a Middle-Eastern state, according to the Financial Times.
KIA is currently invested in Japanese stocks and bonds, Shamali said, but is looking to expand into the nation’s real estate sector – and may also delve deeper into Japan’s stock market.
As Money Morning has been reporting for some time, Japan is becoming an increasingly alluring investment alternative to the United States – especially because of its growing involvement with China – a reality that global investors are beginning to grasp themselves. But Japan’s growing profit potential isn’t the only reason the KIA is engineering this shift.
An increased level of investment in Japan is part of Kuwait’s plan to diversify away from American assets. The country removed its currency peg to the U.S. dollar in May 2007, and the KIA has been dissatisfied by its investments in Citigroup Inc. (C) and Merrill Lynch & Co. Inc. (MER). Over the past two years, the KIA has raised the portion of money allocated to Asian investments from 10% to 20%. The fund controlled approximately $270 billion at the end of March.
Kuwait is just one of many Middle Eastern states to benefit from the tidal swell of capital that’s been washed through the region, following the pull of record oil prices. And yet, increasingly cognizant that their oil money will dry up one day, Middle East nations are diversifying their investments for that future time. That’s one reason Dubai is repositioning itself as a gateway point for global trade and tourism, and is constructing the world’s largest airport, a project that’s creating profit plays for investors throughout the world. This realistic view of the future is also the reason that Gulf Arab states and companies spent about $60 billion on foreign assets in 2007, almost double the previous two years combined, according to Reuters.
However, foreign investment that has traditionally been earmarked for the United States is now pouring into developing markets with more growth potential.
Last month, the Financial Times reported that a large, unnamed Gulf fund had cut its dollar-denominated holdings from more than 80% a year ago to less than 60%.
Earlier this year, Qatar Investment Authority bought a 27% stake in Dragon Capital, a Vietnamese property fund. And in February, it bought a 15% stake in an Indian office development being built at the Bandra Kurla complex in Mumbai.
The fund has $60 billion in assets and more emerging market real estate investments are in the works.
“We are focusing on prime cities in India, China, Singapore, Korea, Vietnam and Malaysia, cities around the world where there is strong [gross domestic product] growth and fundamental unmet demand for high quality real estate,” Navid Chamdia, head of real estate at Qatar Investment, told Bloomberg at a sovereign-wealth funds conference in Abu Dhabi. “About 40% of our real-estate investments will be in Asia.”
Even China – which has strong investment ties with the United States – is diversifying away from the U.S. market. For instance, China’s State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE) has been actively seeking deals with private equity firms in Europe as part of a specific strategy to reduce its dollar-denominated holdings. A shift in policy at China’s SAFE is particularly significant because it holds the vast majority of China’s $1.68 trillion of foreign currency reserves in dollar-denominated assets.
Last 5 posts by Money Morning
- Obama Commits to Free Trade Deal With South Korea, But Auto Trade Remains Sticking Point - November 20th, 2009
- Investment News Briefs - November 20th, 2009
- Hot Stocks: Comcast Looks to Expand Its Brand with Potential NBC Universal Takeover - November 20th, 2009
- Although President Obama Warns of a “Double-Dip” Recession, Money Morning Expects U.S. Recovery to Continue - November 19th, 2009
- Investment News Briefs - November 19th, 2009
![]() About Money Morning (http://moneymorning.com)
Money Moves the Markets; Money Morning Lets You Move First We’re in the midst of the greatest investing boom in almost 60 years. And rest assured - this boom is not about to end anytime soon. You see, the “flattening of the world” continues to spawn new markets worth trillions of dollars; new customers that measure in the billions; an insatiable global demand for basic resources that’s growing exponentially ; and a technological revolution even in the most distant markets on the planet. The bottom line is this: With U.S. influence slipping, and the dollar declining as well, investors who think too narrowly about this transformation will face years of meager returns. But those who embrace this new global reality can make themselves very wealthy. # Over the next 25 years, America’s share of the worldwide economic pie will slip from 28% to 24%… # Even as Asia’s share almost doubles ;which means it will account for a whopping 55% of the global economy by 2030. The big brokerage firms are making a killing on the global boom. Yet Wall Street reserves the timeliest information - and the best profit opportunities - for its partners or wealthiest clients. And the Securities and Exchange Commission doesn’t help the everyday investor much either. The second sad fact is this: While you can buy any U.S. or Canadian stock you want, the SEC prohibits you from purchasing many of the available international stocks. The reason: Foreign companies that haven’t registered with the SEC are off-limits to most U.S. individual investors. Our worldwide research staff includes former investment bankers, international financiers, emerging markets specialists and veteran financial journalists. Our experts know that certain capital flows essentially act as a “leading indicator” of future profit opportunities. These are opportunities that you won’t be reading or hearing about anywhere else. Each weekday morning, in a readable style you can digest in just a few minutes, you will reap the benefits of our research and expert experiences. Indeed, Money Morning will bring you: # The latest reports on China, Japan, Emerging Europe, and the other global hot spots where most investor wealth will be created in the months and years to come… # Reports on companies you’ve likely never heard of - even though they’re poised to sell billions worth of their wares to “new middle class” customers around the world… # Information on the U.S. companies shrewd enough to cash in on this boom in global; # The latest developments in banking, interest rates, foreign investment and other global investing topics; # Advice on how to invest in currencies, precious metals, commodities and energy # Inside news on the hottest investments, including water, uranium and private equity… # And news on rules and regulations, financial trends and strategies - and any other “market intelligence” that you will need to become a shrewd-and-successful investor in the greatest global investing boom most of us will ever see. Money does move markets. But Money Morning lets you move first. |



