IN PORTS,
RAILWAYSS, POWER
Kuwait firms
plan $10B investments
KUWAIT—Kuwaiti firms including logistics
provider Agility plan to invest more than $10 billion in
infrastructure projects in the Philippines, the company leading
the group said yesterday .
The firms and one non-Kuwaiti company plan to
develop airports, ports, railways, power stations and
telecommunications, Kuwait investment firm Al-Abraj Holding Co.
said in a statement.
The deal is pending a signing with the
Philippine government expected at the World Economic Forum in
Davos, Switzerland, later this month, Abraj Deputy Chairman
Sameer Nasser Ali Hussein said.
The Philippines government has said it wants
to invest 1.7 trillion pesos ($41 billion) in its power, water,
telecommunications and transport industries by 2010. Last year,
it offered 10 infrastructure projects worth $2 billion to
foreign investors.
Gulf Arab states and companies, buoyed by
record oil prices, have been looking to invest more in Asia,
where economies are growing faster than in Europe and the United
States, traditional destinations for their surplus funds.
Qatar’s $60 billion sovereign wealth fund,
the Qatar Investment Authority, said last month it plans to
spend at least $850 million in Indonesia, its biggest commitment
to the country.
Kuwait’s Abraj said the group would set up a
holding company in Europe, of which the Kuwaiti partners would
own 75 percent and British firm Argon, acting on behalf of
Philippine authorities, 25 percent. This could change a little,
Hussein said.
He said Abraj wanted to raise the money
possibly through an initial public offering, while Philippine
institutions would also contribute to the project.
Kuwaiti partners include International
Leasing & Investment and al-Mal Investment Co., Abraj said.
Agility said negotiations were continuing. "A
big part of this project would come to Agility," Hussein said.
The biggest investment from the Middle East
in the Philippines is a 40 percent stake held by state-owned
Saudi Aramco in Petron Corp., the largest oil refiner in the
country. —Reuters