Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 80

Parting Shot infrastructure and urban planning. It is difficult to know exactly how much Arab capital is currently invested in Brazil, as official figures disclose only funds coming directly from the region, with no intermediaries. But there is increasing flow. In 2008, Saudi company HiTs Telecom announced, as part of its pan-emerging markets strategy, the purchase, for $62 million, of 49% of the capital of Unicel, which is licensed to operate mobile telephony services in metropolitan São Paulo. In the beginning of the year, a foreign fund with Arab capital bought one of the towers at real estate enterprise Ventura Corporate Towers, in Rio de Janeiro, for $422 million. Another Saudi company, Amiantit, has been present in Brazil for longer. In 2002, it purchased Amitech, a maker of large-diameter pipes and connections based in the interior of the state of São Paulo. Last year, the company sold its majority stake in the company to Colombia’s Inversiones Mundial, but maintained a 30% share. In the wake of last year’s food crisis several Gulf countries announced plans to invest in overseas land in an attempt to export the produce back to their home market to ensure food security. Saudi Arabia is at the forefront of such plans and recently announced a $800 million company to support private-sector investment in overseas farms. Brazil has 14% of the world’s freshwater resources, the most of any country and as a geography is being promoted by agricultural funds including AgriFarma. Inter-EM Development Overseas acquisitions are increasingly part of global corporate strategies rather than mere portfolio investments. DP World, which is backed by the sovereign wealth fund of the emirate of Dubai, revealed in October 2007 that it will commit some $250 million in a joint venture with the Cuban government to transform Mariel, about 30 miles to the west of Havana, into a world-class transshipment center. The flow of Arab capital into an undervalued but strategic asset like Mariel could transform Cuba once again into a major entrepôt at the crossroads of the global economy Families, particularly within emerging markets, have complex wealth profiles and participants. They have multiple – often conflicting – goals and constraints and their portfolios have several different kinds of assets, all of which need to be considered simultaneously. In place of the standard assumption that all decisions are rational, we subscribe to the growing view that more work has to be done understanding how people make decisions, reconciling the standard efficient markets hypothesis with behavioral alternatives. Regional investors have an increasing need for customized solutions that combine a pragmatic understanding of liabilities with an asset allocation framework incorporating risk and liquidity concerns. Moreover, there is a misalignment of interest and a lack of comfort between investors and the Western financial intermediaries who serve them. The excessive commercialization of the global financial product platforms has left a noticeable service gap. Mistrust and mutual misunderstanding persist. The financial crisis reinforces our view that sustainable inter-emerging market regional development will be a primary driver of economic and industrial change over the next 25 years. Even beyond the bailouts and recent volatility, the challenges of the climate crisis, water scarcity, income disparity, security, extreme poverty and disease, particularly within the emerging regional markets, command our urgent attention. Regional public and private investors are engaged in increasingly active portfolio management and disintermediation and their investment strategies can have a significant impact on both Western and other emerging economies. Proof of that is the rising number of Arab organizations registered at Brazil’s Securities and Exchange Commission (CVM), so as to inject funds into the local market. Only one registration was made in 2001, and then two years passed by without new entries. In 2004, there were three new registrations, then five more in 2005, another five in 2006, with a peak of 12 in 2007. The recent highly correlated fall in equity prices and oil prices potentially remind us of the need to hold assets that retain value during a global economic contraction. Both public and private sector participants want to acquire diverse assets and revenue streams, along with the underlying technology and expertise that ought to allow a transition to something more sustainable and vibrant. Building deeper and more sophisticated capital markets is, of course, one part of the larger equation. Although LatAm’s thirst for capital, Asia’s requirement for natural resources and the Middle East’s need for stable food supply make the three regions complementary economic blocs, opportunities go beyond this. Brazil’s president Lula has legitimately seized the “SouthSouth” mantle, reminding a Saudi audience in May that the mere possession of wealth is no guarantee of its preservation, let alone growth over generations. He boldly suggests that if instead of putting monetary reserves into US Treasuries, countries like Brazil and Saudi Arabia should build factories across their own geographies, invest in science and technology, universities and food production. Of course, the question for any prudent investor, however, is “How long will liberalization and graduation from emergence take?” A century later, about two-fifths of all the markets that were previously classified as “emerging” remain so. In a region where Hugo Chávez is the longest serving president and his own attachment to Iran palpable, linear projections of growth and emergence are subject to the nonlinear vicissitudes and realties of politics and culture. LF * Karim Shariff is the managing partner of Majlis Partners, a Dubaibased wealth management firm. 80 LatinFinance September/October 2009

Latin Finance - September/October 2009

Table of Contents for the Digital Edition of Latin Finance - September/October 2009

Latin Finance - September/October 2009
Contents
Investment Banking Survey
Who Said That?
OTPP Investment Strategy
Central Bank Scorecards
Brazil Liability Management
Real Estate Equity Resurrected
Structured Finance Forecasts
Grim Outlook. Reform Required
Banorte Seeks to Grow
Peru Spending Hits a Block
BCP Sees Better Days
Caribbean Investment Report
Sustainable Banking
Legal Services Survey
Parting Shot
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - Latin Finance - September/October 2009
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - Cover2
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - Contents
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 2
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 3
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 4
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 5
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 6
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 7
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 8
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 9
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 10
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 11
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 12
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 13
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - Investment Banking Survey
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - Who Said That?
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 16
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 17
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 18
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 19
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 20
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 21
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 22
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - OTPP Investment Strategy
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 24
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 25
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - Central Bank Scorecards
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 27
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 28
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - Brazil Liability Management
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - Real Estate Equity Resurrected
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 31
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 32
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 33
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 34
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 35
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 36
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - Structured Finance Forecasts
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 38
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - Grim Outlook. Reform Required
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 40
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 41
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 42
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 43
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 44
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - Banorte Seeks to Grow
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - Peru Spending Hits a Block
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 47
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 48
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 49
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - BCP Sees Better Days
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 51
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 52
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 53
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 54
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - Caribbean Investment Report
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 56
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 57
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 58
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 59
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 60
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 61
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 62
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 63
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 64
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 65
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 66
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - Sustainable Banking
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 68
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - Legal Services Survey
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 70
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 71
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 72
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 73
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 74
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 75
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 76
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 77
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 78
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - Parting Shot
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - 80
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - Cover3
Latin Finance - September/October 2009 - Cover4
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