MUSCAT/SOFIA: Oman's biggest sovereign wealth fund has started legal action against the Bulgarian government over the collapse of Corporate Commercial Bank (Corpbank), a source at the fund told Reuters on Wednesday.
Oman's State General Reserve Fund owned a 30 percent stake in the Balkan country's fourth-biggest lender, which was felled by a bank run and shut down by the central bank, triggering the country's worst financial crisis since the 1990s.
News of the legal action came as a Bulgarian parliament commission on Wednesday accused the main shareholder of running Corpbank as a pyramid scheme under the lax supervision of the central bank and the intelligence service.
Corpbank's main owner, a Bulgarian tycoon called Tsvetan Vassilev, has been charged with embezzlement since the bank run and an independent audit ordered by the central bank forced Corpbank to write off nearly two-thirds of its assets. Insolvency proceedings in Bulgaria are ongoing.
A consortium of investors including the Omani fund had submitted proposals for rescuing Corpbank in October, but a month later the central bank stripped the lender of its licence and ended any chance of a turnaround.
"The arbitration is in European courts," said a source at the fund, speaking on condition of anonymity. "Our demands are to get the book value of our investment as per the day the bank was stopped as well as interest," the source added, declining to give further details.
"The Finance Ministry does not have information of launched cases against the Bulgarian state at European courts, nor for registered arbitration cases against Bulgaria on the initiative of the State General Reserve Fund of the Sultanate of Oman," the Finance Ministry said in an email.
The run on Corpbank started after reports of shady deals at the lender surfaced and amid a public dispute between Vassilev and a business rival.
Vassilev, who is in neighboring Serbia and awaiting a court decision on whether to extradite him, has denied any wrongdoing and said the bank run was a plot hatched by his competitors in collusion with some state officials.
The fallout continues. Prosecutors have charged two auditors from the Bulgarian unit of consulting firm KPMG with not reporting shortcomings in Corpbank's activities. KPMG did not comment on the charges. Two former central bank deputy governors are also being investigated. They have denied wrongdoing.
The parliament commission's report said more than two-thirds of Corpbank's loans were extended to firms linked to Vassilev or to shell companies, echoing the findings of the audit commissioned by the Bulgarian National Bank (BNB).
"The bank is one financial pyramid with its majority owner at the top," said Snezhana Dukova, a member of the commission that was set up in March, accusing regulators of being "asleep".
The report said Corpbank could not profit from the loans it was extending to favoured parties, meaning it was forced to raise funds by offering interest rates to depositors that were double the average rate for the sector in Bulgaria.
"Failure to address these practices at Corpbank has allowed the bank to function as a pyramid scheme. Here lies the big responsibility of its main shareholder Tsvetan Vassilev, the management of the bank as well as of the banking regulator BNB," the report said.
The Corpbank saga has soured relations between lawmakers and the central bank. Central Bank Gov. Ivan Iskrov tendered his resignation in June, months before his term is due to end, and hearings to choose a successor are ongoing. Iskrov last year accused parliament of using the crisis as a "political toy".
Oman takes legal action against Bulgaria over bank collapse
Oman takes legal action against Bulgaria over bank collapse
Saudi public investment fund assets rise 36% to$58bn in Q3
RIYADH: Assets held by public investment funds in Saudi Arabia rose 36 percent from a year earlier to about SR217.9 billion ($58.1 billion) by the end of the third quarter of 2025, driven by strong growth in domestic investments, official data showed.
Asset values also rose 5.7 percent from the previous quarter, according to data from the Capital Market Authority cited by the Saudi Press Agency.
Saudi Arabia’s stock exchange has seen strong growth in recent years, attracting increased investor interest in fixed-income instruments amid a global environment of elevated interest rates.
According to SPA, the number of subscribers to public investment funds reached 1.59 million by the end of the third quarter, representing an annual increase of 1.5 percent.
The growth in public investment fund assets was driven by a 39 percent year-on-year rise in assets of local funds, which reached SR186.9 billion in the third quarter of 2025 and accounted for 86 percent of total assets.
Meanwhile, assets of foreign funds rose to SR31.1 billion, reflecting annual growth of 21 percent.
The number of public investment funds in the Kingdom increased 11.6 percent year on year to 346, up from 310 in the third quarter of 2024.
Public investment fund assets were distributed across a range of investment types, including equities, bonds, cash instruments, real estate investments, and other assets.
Local money market funds held the largest share of assets at SR75.6 billion, followed by local equities at SR46.6 billion, real estate investment funds at SR28.9 billion, and funds invested in other local assets at SR19.6 billion.
To further strengthen the capital market ecosystem, the Kingdom announced earlier this month that it would open its financial markets to all foreign investors.
The measures introduced by the Capital Market Authority include the removal of restrictions such as the Qualified Foreign Investor framework, which required a minimum of $500 million in assets under management, as well as the abolition of swap agreements.










