Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
08DOHA783
2008-11-05 08:07:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Doha
Cable title:  

QIA ASSESSES INVESTMENT LANDSCAPE FOR TREASURY

Tags:  EINV EFIN ECON QA 
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VZCZCXRO3351
PP RUEHDE RUEHDIR
DE RUEHDO #0783/01 3100807
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
P 050807Z NOV 08
FM AMEMBASSY DOHA
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 8387
RUEATRS/DEPT OF TREASURY WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
INFO RUEHZM/GULF COOPERATION COUNCIL COLLECTIVE
RUCPDOC/DEPT OF COMMERCE WASHINGTON DC
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 DOHA 000783 

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 11/05/2018
TAGS: EINV EFIN ECON QA
SUBJECT: QIA ASSESSES INVESTMENT LANDSCAPE FOR TREASURY
DEPUTY SECRETARY KIMMITT

REF: DOHA 782

Classified By: Amb. Joseph LeBaron for Reasons 1.4 (b) and (d).

--------------
(C) KEY POINTS
--------------

-- The Qatar Investment Authority (QIA) would like Qatar to
be involved in multilateral efforts to deal with the global
financial crisis.

-- The fund's managing director, Dr. Hussain Al-Abdulla,
believes the decline in asset prices is the major financial
problem today, and liquidity constraints are a result of this
decline.

-- Al-Abdulla cautioned against over-regulation and said the
QIA had lost faith in the rating agencies.

-- QIA will wait at least six months for prices to decline
further before buying more financial and real estate assets,
he said. When QIA starts buying again in the United States,
it will focus on investments in food companies and the
technology, aerospace, and defense sectors.

-- Deputy Secretary Kimmitt noted that as Qatar goes up this
investment chain, it could run into CFIUS concerns about U.S.
national security issues. Qatar should be prepared to work
constructively with Congress, Treasury, and State.

END KEY POINTS.

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 DOHA 000783

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 11/05/2018
TAGS: EINV EFIN ECON QA
SUBJECT: QIA ASSESSES INVESTMENT LANDSCAPE FOR TREASURY
DEPUTY SECRETARY KIMMITT

REF: DOHA 782

Classified By: Amb. Joseph LeBaron for Reasons 1.4 (b) and (d).

--------------
(C) KEY POINTS
--------------

-- The Qatar Investment Authority (QIA) would like Qatar to
be involved in multilateral efforts to deal with the global
financial crisis.

-- The fund's managing director, Dr. Hussain Al-Abdulla,
believes the decline in asset prices is the major financial
problem today, and liquidity constraints are a result of this
decline.

-- Al-Abdulla cautioned against over-regulation and said the
QIA had lost faith in the rating agencies.

-- QIA will wait at least six months for prices to decline
further before buying more financial and real estate assets,
he said. When QIA starts buying again in the United States,
it will focus on investments in food companies and the
technology, aerospace, and defense sectors.

-- Deputy Secretary Kimmitt noted that as Qatar goes up this
investment chain, it could run into CFIUS concerns about U.S.
national security issues. Qatar should be prepared to work
constructively with Congress, Treasury, and State.

END KEY POINTS.


1. (C) Deputy Treasury Secretary Robert Kimmitt met October
29 with Qatar Investment Authority (QIA) Executive Board
Member (and de facto Managing Director) Dr. Hussain
Al-Abdulla. Also participating in the meetings from the U.S.
side were Ambassador, Treasury Deputy Assistant Secretary for
the Middle East Andy Baukol, Treasury Attach Matt Epstein,
Press Spokesperson Rob Saliterman, and Econoff. (See reftel
for a readout of the delegation's meeting with Qatar's
Finance and Economy Minister and Deputy Central Bank
Governor).


2. (C) Al-Abdulla began by stating that Qatar does not want
to just have its view represented at the upcoming G-20
summit: it wants a seat at the table and U.S. support for
Qatar's involvement in a multilateral process to deal with
the global financial crisis. He continued that the world is
witnessing important/fundamental structural changes and we
are all suffering because of a change in the assessment of
risk. Al-Abdulla underscored that the QIA's investment
objectives are financial, not political.



3. (C) Pressing a theme he would return to many times during
the conversation, Al-Abdulla emphasized that in his view the
major problem today is a decrease in asset prices. Liquidity
problems are merely a result of this decline. Noting that
"everything we own today is going down," he asked what
measures the USG would take to stem the decline in asset
prices, and if officials in the U.S. and Europe were focused
on this problem.


4. (C) Deputy Secretary Kimmitt thanked Al-Abdulla for his
views, noting that he "slightly disagreed," because in
September liquidity was the issue. He then detailed some of
the USG efforts to keep homeowners in their houses, such as
the Hope Now program which has restructured over two million
mortgages. He continued that the USG is planning to buy
troubled assets, starting in November, and will inject
capital into banks and probably other industries as well.


5. (C) Al-Abdulla asked where the USG was headed for
regulation, particularly of hedge funds. Deputy Secretary
Kimmitt responded that the USG believes in free markets but
needs to get the right balance between regulation and market
discipline. Ultimately, we don't want to see the USG
substituting its judgment for the market's judgment.
Moreover, the USG wants to react to the current problems, but
not over-react, as happened with implementation of the
Sarbanes-Oxley legislation. Hefurther noted that the
current crisis is not abot hedge funds but, in fact, started
in the most eavily-regulated sectors of the markets. DeputySecretary Kimmitt said that the USG will resist heay
regulation of private pools of capital.


6. C) Al-Abdulla responded that it's good to have som
regulation, but not over-regulaton. He lamented the poor
work of the rating agencies in recent years, saying "we lost
faith as investors in the rating agencies - they're the

DOHA 00000783 002.2 OF 002


people to be blamed (for the crisis)." Returning to the
G-20 summit, Al-Abdulla asked if a discussion of the dollar
as the world's reserve currency will be on the agenda, and
whether the U.S. could accept that the dollar will not be the
only reserve currency. Deputy Secretary Kimmitt responded
that it will not be on the agenda and it should not be an
issue.


7. (C) Turning to the U.S. investment climate, Al-Abdulla
said the QIA sees plenty of opportunities in the U.S., but is
in a waiting posture until the end of 2009 or beginning of
2010 as he thinks "things will continue to get cheaper." He
added that his strong recommendation was for the USG to "buy
another USD 700 billion" in troubled assets to help support
prices. Al-Abdulla believes the U.S. will recover faster
than Europe, and there are lots of good American companies to
invest in, particularly in the high-tech, defense and
security sectors. He noted QIA investments could reach 20
percent in some of these companies, underscoring that timing
of the purchases is the most important factor. Noting he was
speaking as an individual and not necessarily for the whole
board, he said his philosophy has changed because of the
financial crisis. He now wants to move "very slowly" on
further investments, waiting at least six months before
making purchases because it seems that "tomorrow will be
cheaper."


8. (C) Al-Abdulla continued that the QIA sees two structural
changes happening right now. In the financial sector,
governments won't allow banks to become as highly leveraged
as in the past, and there will still be some de-leveraging.
In the commodities sector, the current drop is temporary, and
all signs point to sustained growth in demand for
agricultural products, oil and gas. The QIA is shifting to
invest more in commodities; defense and security firms; and
agriculture, including in the U.S. QIA continues to consider
new real estate and financial deals but won't buy unless the
prices are attractive.


9. (C) Al-Abdulla assessed that the financial picture is
"still too foggy" for the coming six months. He believed
that private equity funds will have trouble obtaining credit,
causing further problems by mid-2009. Deputy Secretary
Kimmitt concluded by encouraging Al-Abdulla and the QIA to
exercise public policy due diligence when thinking about
investing in defense and technology firms and consult with
Treasury, State, and the Congress so as to avoid raising
political concerns.


10. (U) Deputy Secretary Kimmitt cleared this message.

LeBaron