DUBAI — The Middle East will be an important growth  area in coming years for investment banks, including Barclays, as local  wealth funds put their oil dollars to work buying European assets, a  senior executive at the British bank said.
"If you  look globally, the upside is in emerging markets and the Middle East is a  key component of that," Makram Azar, global vice-chairman for  investment banking at Barclays, told Reuters.
"We are committed to the Middle East. I do not see why our strategy would change," Azar said in an interview.
Last  week's appointment of retail banker Antony Jenkins as Barclays group  chief executive could see a shift from riskier investment banking,  analysts said, as the lender tries to recover from an interest  rate-rigging scandal that brought down former CEO Bob Diamond.
Barclays  is also the subject of a British regulatory inquiry into payments to  Qatar's sovereign wealth fund linked to its participation in an 11  billion pound ($17 billion) refinancing of the bank at the height of the  financial crisis in 2008.
Azar would not comment on whether that inquiry might affect its business in the region.
While  investment banking has been at the heart of recent troubles at  Barclays, the unit delivered 54 percent of underlying first-half group  profit.
Busy advising
Middle  Eastern deal activity has been picking up after a subdued period.  Cash-rich Gulf Arab sheikhs and governments are buying European assets,  lured in part by attractive valuations due to weak markets.
"There  is a pick-up in M&A activity in the MENA (Middle East and North  Africa) region, led to a large extent by Qatar and Abu Dhabi," Azar  said.
"The environment in Europe is still challenging  but there are names that were beaten up and are now trading at  attractive levels. This presents an opportunity for Gulf investors."
Barclays  leads M&A advisory rankings in MENA, according to Dealogic, with  $4.7 billion of deals this year, followed by Goldman Sachs at $3.7  billion and Credit Suisse on $3.5 billion.
Gulf  investment into Europe almost froze in 2010 and 2011 because of  confusion over the euro zone debt crisis and losses suffered on previous  overseas deals completed at the height of the 2008 crisis – most  notably sovereign funds from Abu Dhabi and Kuwait investing in US banks.
Middle  East funds are beginning to return and are making waves, led by  cash-rich Qatar, which said last month it was buying a 20 percent stake  in London Heathrow airport owner BAA.
Also, Qatar's  sovereign wealth fund became an unexpected kingmaker in the  Glencore-Xstrata deal after spending more than 3 billion pounds raising  its stake to 12.3 percent.
Other regional players are  also involved, with Abu Dhabi fund Mubadala acquiring a 5.6 percent  stake in Brazilian conglomerate EBX for $2 billion and Almarai, Saudi  Arabia's largest dairy company, buying Argentine farm operator  Fondomonte S.A. for $83 million.
Gulf Arab investors are also targeting options closer to home as they look for places to park their cash.
"The  oil price is at a high level, higher than the levels at which Gulf  government budgets are based on, and this excess revenue needs to be  invested," Azar said.
"Some of it is being channeled  indirectly into the region in the form of investments such as Qatar  Telecom's bid for Wataniya and the rest is invested outside the region."
Barclays  has been advising Qtel's $2.2 billion bid for the 47.5 percent of  Kuwaiti telco Wataniya it does not own. The Qatari group has also  increased its stake in Iraqi firm Asiacell to 60 percent in a $1.47  billion deal in June.
Gulf-based banks are also said  to be keen to acquire stakes in Egyptian lenders being offloaded by  French owners who want to divest assets to shore up capital positions at  home.
Azar said further opportunities would emerge this year.
"The bank worked on several deals in the region worth around $4.7 billion and the year is not over yet. We are now looking at a number of additional deals in the pipeline." — Reuters
source: gmanetwork.com