Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
08KUWAIT78
2008-01-17 16:04:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Kuwait
Cable title:  

KUWAIT INVESTMENT AUTHORITY TO INVEST USD 5

Tags:  EFIN EINV KU 
pdf how-to read a cable
VZCZCXRO5136
PP RUEHDE RUEHDIR
DE RUEHKU #0078/01 0171604
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
P 171604Z JAN 08
FM AMEMBASSY KUWAIT
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 0625
INFO RUEHZM/GULF COOPERATION COUNCIL COLLECTIVE PRIORITY
RUEATRS/DEPT OF TREASURY WASHDC PRIORITY
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 KUWAIT 000078 

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STATE FOR NEA/ARP, EB; TREASURY FOR JONATHAN ROSE

E.O. 12958: DECL: 01/17/2018
TAGS: EFIN EINV KU
SUBJECT: KUWAIT INVESTMENT AUTHORITY TO INVEST USD 5
BILLION IN CITI AND MERRILL

REF: A. 07 KUWAIT 1696


B. 07 KUWAIT 1422

C. 07 KUWAIT 1600

D. 07 KUWAIT 1701

Classified By: Acting DCM Tim Lenderking for reasons 1.4 (b) and (d).

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 KUWAIT 000078

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STATE FOR NEA/ARP, EB; TREASURY FOR JONATHAN ROSE

E.O. 12958: DECL: 01/17/2018
TAGS: EFIN EINV KU
SUBJECT: KUWAIT INVESTMENT AUTHORITY TO INVEST USD 5
BILLION IN CITI AND MERRILL

REF: A. 07 KUWAIT 1696


B. 07 KUWAIT 1422

C. 07 KUWAIT 1600

D. 07 KUWAIT 1701

Classified By: Acting DCM Tim Lenderking for reasons 1.4 (b) and (d).


1. (U) On January 15, Kuwait Investment Authority (KIA)
announced that it had agreed to a USD 3 billion investment in
Citi and USD 2 billion investment in Merrill Lynch through
the following press release:

Begin press release:

Kuwait Investment Authority (KIA) announced that it agreed to
a USD 3 billion participation in the USD 12.5 billion Citi
Group Convertible Preferred Securities and USD 2 billion
participation in the USD 6.6 billion Merrill Lynch
Convertible Preferred Stock.

As a long term financial investor, KIA believes that the
markets currently provide attractive investment opportunities
in the financial sector

Kuwait has the oldest Sovereign Wealth Fund in the world. It
started as the Kuwait Investment board in London in 1953.
KIA in Kuwait was established as an autonomous government
body responsible for the management of the assets of the
country.

The KIA's main role is to transfer a single non-recurring
asset, which has a high volatility and risk, into a
diversified portfolio of financial assets.

For more information on KIA, please visit www.kia.gov.kw

End press release.


2. (C) KIA Executive Director Ahmad Bastaki told econoff on
16 January that KIA, which manages at least USD 213 billion
in assets through its General Reserve Fund and Fund for
Future Generations, views these new investments in Citi and
Merrill as it does its major stakes in BP and Chrysler: they
are long-term, "core investments." Bastaki insisted that
this sudden investment in two major U.S. financial
institutions does not mark a departure from KIA's existing
investment strategy (described in the background section
below and on the KIA website). He said KIA's target rate of
return is 7.01 percent with a risk profile (presumably
standard deviation) of 9.3 percent, which would enable the
KIA to double its investments within 10 years. Bastaki said
KIA has always invested in U.S. financial institutions as a

long-term, passive financial investor and a stable
shareholder. Bastaki said KIA does have concerns about the
prospects for the dollar and a possible U.S. recession but
added that the current market in the U.S. stills presents
attractive investment opportunities in the financial sector.


3. (C) Responding to calls for SWFs to demonstrate greater
transparency and work through the IMF to develop a set of
best practices, Bastaki pointed out that KIA's corporate
governance structure has been rated as one of the best in the
world by a leading independent global consultant and also
re-aligned itself in 2006 to reflect industry best practices.
(Note: KIA has in recent months made small but noteworthy
steps towards greater transparency. In July 2007, then
Finance Minister Bader Al-Humaidhi publicly announced the
value of KIA assets under management for the first time at
USD 213 billion. Subsequently, in November 2007, the local
Kuwaiti press published an unusual table listing the overseas
investments of the Kuwait Investment Authority's Fund for
Future Generations by geographic distribution and asset class
(Ref A). KIA has also updated its website several times in
recent months to include an expanded section on governance
and a description of its general investment strategy as
revised in 2006. End Note.) In recent meetings with U.S.
Treasury officials including Deputy Secretary Kimmitt, Under
Secretary McCormick, and former DAS Saeed, GOK officials have

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expressed their willingness, despite some skepticism, to
engage in further dialogue about the IMF best practices
scheme (Refs B, C, and D).

--------------
BACKGROUND
--------------


4. (SBU) The Kuwait Investment Authority was founded in 1982,
though its London-based subsidiary, the Kuwait Investment
Office, has existed since 1953. KIA manages the General

KUWAIT 00000078 002 OF 002


Reserve Fund (which receives all government revenues and
includes other state-owned funds, including the Kuwait
Petroleum Corporation Reserve Fund),the Fund for Future
Generations (which receives 10 percent of the all state
revenues annually and reinvests all of its investment
income),and other monies committed by the Ministry of
Finance. (Note: In FY2006/2007, about 95 percent of
government income came from oil). KIA invests primarily in
OECD countries with asset allocations roughly corresponding
to each country's share of world GDP. Most of KIA's
investments are managed by external fund managers in the U.S.
and Europe, though KIA's London office manages some of its
investments directly. KIA's board of directors is headed by
the Minister of Finance, with other seats allocated to the
Oil Minister, the Governor of the Central Bank, the Under
Secretary of Finance, and five other Kuwaiti nationals, three

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of whom must not hold any other public office. KIA employs
about 330 staff in Kuwait and about 100 in London. The staff
in Kuwait do not manage investments directly but are
characterized as "managers of fund managers." About 80
percent of KIA's staff are Kuwaiti nationals. Managing
Director Bader Al-Saad says he hires about one out of every
five applicants, who are required to have a degree in
business and strong English skills. KIA offers its employees
impressive benefits including a fully-funded MBA at any
top-25 university at which they are accepted as well as 2-3
year rotations as "Junior Professional Officers" at the World
Bank. Al-Saad said because the Kuwaiti headquarters, but not
the London office, is constrained by Kuwait's civil service
pay scale, he loses many of his most talented employees to
more lucrative jobs in the private sector. Recent press
reporting has suggested that Al-Saad was frustrated by KIA's
inability to rapidly seize emerging opportunities in the
financial sector compared to other SWFs. He is reportedly
trying to make KIA more nimble and responsive.

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For more reporting from Embassy Kuwait, visit:
http://www.state.sgov.gov/p/nea/kuwait/?cable s

Visit Kuwait's Classified Website:
http://www.state.sgov.gov/p/nea/kuwait/
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MISENHEIMER