Qatar Investment Slowing As Oil Slumps - Investment House CEO
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Qatar Investment Slowing As Oil Slumps – Investment House CEO

Qatar Investment Slowing As Oil Slumps – Investment House CEO

A proposal by Qatar’s Investment House for a QAR750 million IPO of an agricultural firm has been shelved by regulators.

Gulf Business

A proposal by Qatar’s Investment House for a QAR750 million ($206 million) flotation of an agricultural firm has been shelved by regulators, while investment in Qatar is slowing generally because of weak oil prices, Investment House’s chief executive said.

Investment House is a private Qatari investment bank that is 87 per cent owned by Qatar Investment and Projects Development Holding Co (QIPCO), a local investment group.

Late last year the firm proposed an initial public offer for a planned company that would produce chickens, a commodity which is mostly imported into the tiny desert state.

The QAR750 million initial public offer would have raised half the money needed for the project, while the other half had been obtained from other investors, Hashem Al-Aqeel said in an interview.

“Qatar consumes about 89 million kilogrammes of chicken a year and only produces six million kg – the rest is imported, so having this kind of project here is a huge step towards food security,” he said.

Now, however, the government has put the IPO on hold, he said. He declined to comment on the reason behind that decision or say when the project might proceed.

ON HOLD

In general, many investment projects in Qatar have slowed since oil prices began to plunge last year, Aqeel said. Qatar is the world’s top natural gas exporter, and gas prices have been dragged down by the decline in oil.

“The lower oil price is affecting Qatar – we are seeing a slowdown in the rate of investment here in the construction, banking and energy sectors.”

In January, state-run Qatar Petroleum and Shell said they had decided not to proceed with their $6.4 billion Al Karaana petrochemical project in Qatar. Construction had not yet begun.

Aqeel said most projects that were not related to Qatar’s hosting of the 2022 World Cup soccer tournament were slowing, and that investors were generally waiting to see what happened to energy prices before they committed fresh money to projects.

Qatar government officials have given a more positive picture of the economy; in December the Ministry of Development Planning and Statistics forecast gross domestic product would grow 7.7 per cent in 2015, and senior officials have said key economic projects will not be cut back.

Qatar’s huge fiscal reserves mean the government can continue spending heavily on the economy for years even if its oil and gas revenues have shrunk.

However, Aqeel said banking system liquidity in Qatar was beginning to suffer. “From initial indicators you can see that deposits are lower so far this year, which will result in banks having less liquidity to lend, and the loans will have a higher interest rate.”

The latest central bank data shows total deposits at commercial banks in Qatar fell to QAR553 billion at the end of December from QAR560.4 billion in September, though they were up 7.4 per cent from a year earlier.

This year Investment House will focus on projects involving the purchase of properties and warehouses in Europe that have high returns, in addition to projects in Qatar’s education and healthcare sectors.

“I expect this slowdown will last a couple of years, and when things are slow, good sectors in invest in are healthcare and education.”


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