Saudi PIF builds U.S. sports role with backing for women’s golf

Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund will back a U.S. women’s golf event for the first time on the LPGA Tour when the Aramco Championship is held in Las Vegas this coming April.

The sovereign wealth fund said it will offer a $4 million purse, making it one of the largest prize funds for a regular LPGA event outside the four major women’s golf competitions in the U.S., the Associated Press reports.

Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has steered the PIF into becoming a leading backer of professional sports, creating the LIV Golf tournament and becoming a sponsor of the ATP tennis series. The PIF also owns a stake in the English Premier League’s Newcastle United football club. LPGA commissioner Craig Kessler described the Saudi-sponsored event as “exactly where we’re headed” in building a truly global schedule.

The move comes amid ongoing tensions in men’s professional golf, where efforts to merge the PGA Tour and PIF-backed LIV Golf remain stalled. Negotiations that once seemed poised to formally integrate LIV’s model into the PGA Tour framework were never finalized, leaving both sides in limbo. Although a framework agreement was signed in June 2023 between PIF and the PGA Tour and European Tour, the deal has yet to yield a merger.

Meanwhile, U.S. President Donald Trump used the PIF-sponsored American Business Forum in Miami on Wednesday to celebrate the one-year anniversary of his election victory. Asserting that the U.S. has the “greatest economy” in the world, he blamed Republican setbacks in Tuesday’s off-year elections on the party’s communication failures, not economic conditions, the AP reported.

Princess Reema bint Bandar, Saudi Arabia’s Ambassador to the U.S., hailed technology ties between the two countries during a moderated discussion at the forum.|

Also causing a stir was an unverified report that the PIF is preparing a competing $70 billion offer for Warner Bros. Discovery amid Paramount’s attempt to buy the U.S. media and entertainment conglomerate.

Trump hosts LIV Golf in Miami, wades into PGA merger talks

U.S. President Donald Trump took a break from the political firestorm over trade tariffs to step into the fray between Saudi-backed LIV Golf and the PGA Tour.

Trump flew to Florida on Thursday for a dinner with players and league officials at the three-day LIV Golf Miami tournament, which starts today at his Doral golf resort.

Speaking to reporters aboard Air Force One, the president said he’s making efforts to resolve the stalemate that followed a framework agreement to combine their business operations two years ago.

“Ultimately, hopefully, the two tours are going to merge,” Trump said, “That’ll be good. I’m involved in that too.”

The U.S. leader has taken a role from the beginning with LIV Golf, which is owned by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund and burst onto the pro scene in 2021 by offering contracts to PGA stars for as much as $200 million.

While Trump has previously appeared at LIV events hosted at Doral, this week would mark his first appearance as president. In his effort to bring the two golf organizations together, Trump held a Feb. 20 meeting in the Oval Office that included PGA Commissioner Jay Monahan; PIF Governor Yasir Al-Rumayyan, and golfers Tiger Woods and Adam Scott.

Britain’s The Guardian reported on Thursday that merger negotiations had reached an impasse after the PGA failed to deliver “serious concessions” in exchange for a proposed $1.5 billion investment from the PIF that would make Al-Rumayyan co-chairman of the joint entity.