What it’s like to fundraise and invest in the Middle East

What it’s like to fundraise and invest in the Middle East


  • Asset managers have gone to the Middle East for decades, hoping to pry off some of the region’s wealth.

  • Family offices, local fundraisers, and investors say the region is still misunderstood, though.

  • Relationships are still the ultimate driver.

For asset managers, the Middle East is the place to be.

Funds seeking capital can pitch their strategies to some of the world’s largest sovereign wealth funds and family offices, which collectively run trillions in assets. Managers searching for a geography with growth potential and limited competition are increasingly spending time in countries such as the United Arab Emirates.

But operating in the Gulf is not the same as working in New York or London, warns Viraj Sawhney, head of Middle East private equity for Warburg Pincus.

The region “feels more like the East than the West,” said Sawhney, who lived in Asia before relocating to Dubai. At SuperReturn Middle East — a private capital conference in the UAE’s largest city — he noted that local references and long-term relationships matter more than flashy PowerPoint presentations.

Transactions and fundraising are relationship-driven, according to both fund allocators and investing professionals.

“So many GPs fly in for a day and expect a check at the end of the day,” said Awaiz Patni, chief financial officer of a Saudi Arabia-based family office, at the SuperReturn conference.

“Money will only come if you build a relationship,” he said.

Millennium, Brevan Howard, Schonfeld, and ExodusPoint are just a few of the hedge funds that have opened offices in either Abu Dhabi or Dubai. Many funds have also been driven to open offices in the region because their employees want to live there, thanks to the tax-free status and warm weather.

A local fundraiser for emerging hedge funds in Dubai, who spoke anonymously because his firm does not allow them to speak publicly, said the notion that the region’s sovereign wealth funds require a physical office to get capital is misguided.

Indeed, Mark Oshida, the regional head of the Middle East and Africa for the consulting firm Cambridge Associates, said his firm has counted many of the large sovereigns as clients for years, but they never pushed the organization to hang a shingle in the country.

Oshida, who moved to Dubai in April, said the organization decided to have a physical presence once it started working with more local family offices, including many run by Europeans or Asians who relocated to take advantage of the tax benefits.


finance.yahoo.com
#fundraise #invest #Middle #East

Share: X · Facebook · LinkedIn

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *