Saudi PIF signs pacts worth $50 billion with China finance groups
The preliminary agreements follow Beijing trip by a delegation of Saudi executives led by Public Investment Fund Governor Yasir Al Rumayyan
Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund is putting its $925 billion in assets to work in China.
Following a trip to Beijing last month by a delegation of Saudi executives led by PIF Governor Yasir Al Rumayyan, the sovereign wealth fund corralled preliminary agreements worth $50 billion with six major Chinese financial institutions.
Besides a series of deals focused on renewable energy and steel manufacturing that were already disclosed, the PIF said in a statement on Thursday that it signed the memorandums of understanding with the Agricultural Bank of China, the Bank of China, the China Construction Bank, China Export and Credit Insurance Corp., the Export-Import Bank of China, and the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China.
The new agreements “demonstrate the PIF’s strong and deepening relationships with leading financial institutions and accentuate PIF’s commitment to enhancing partnerships globally,” Fahad Al Saif, the fund’s Head of Global Capital Finance, said in the statement.
Saudi Arabia, the UAE and other Gulf states have been engaged in a delicate balancing act of strengthening commercial ties with China, the world’s second-biggest economy, while steering clear of U.S. efforts to restrict Chinese access to cutting-edge technology in artificial intelligence and other competitive fields.