Jadwa REIT Saudi in $85m deal for Riyadh retail, office complex

Boulevard Riyadh is a retail and office complex covering 18,854 square meters and with a built-up-area of 36,340 square meters. (AFP file photo)
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Updated 04 March 2021
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Jadwa REIT Saudi in $85m deal for Riyadh retail, office complex

  • Property is located in Riyadh on Prince Turki bin Abdul Aziz Al-Awwal Road in the capital’s northern Hittin district

RIYADH: Jadwa REIT Saudi Fund, a Shariah-compliant real estate investment fund, has signed an agreement to purchase Boulevard Riyadh for SR320 million ($85 million).

Fund manager, Jadwa Investment, announced the deal in a bourse filing on Thursday.

Boulevard Riyadh is a retail and office complex covering 18,854 square meters and with a built-up-area of 36,340 square meters. The development is leased to multiple tenants and has an occupancy rate of 97 percent, with net operating income of approximately SR29.3 million.

The property is located in Riyadh on Prince Turki bin Abdul Aziz Al-Awwal Road in the capital’s northern Hittin district, an area known as Riyadh Boulevard.

According to the statement, the deal was subject to legal due diligence and other regulatory approvals within 180 days from the agreement date.

The transaction is expected to have a positive impact on the fund’s financial performance in the first half of this year, the filing said.

In its latest financial results, Jadwa REIT Saudi Fund posted a net profit of SR35.67 million for the first half of 2020, compared to SR37.23 million for the same period in 2019, according to data from Argaam.

The decline in net profit was mainly attributed to higher financing charges, management and custody fees, and other expenses, in addition to depreciation of operating investments.


UAE, Uzbekistan expand economic cooperation with mining sector pact 

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UAE, Uzbekistan expand economic cooperation with mining sector pact 

JEDDAH: The UAE has signed an agreement to expand cooperation in Uzbekistan’s mining sector, as the two countries seek to scale investment, modernize infrastructure and deepen economic ties. 

The memorandum of understanding was signed by Mohamed Hassan Al-Suwaidi, UAE minister of investment, and Jamshid Khodjaev, Uzbekistan’s deputy prime minister, according to the Emirates News Agency, also known as WAM.

The agreement comes amid growing bilateral investment flows. UAE investments in Uzbekistan reached $1.3 billion in 2024, including about $700 million in renewable energy, with more than $4 billion in joint projects currently under development, WAM reported. 

Commenting on the MoU, Al-Suwaidi said that his country and Uzbekistan share a longstanding relationship built on mutual trust and strong economic cooperation. 

“Today’s signing reflects the UAE’s commitment to forging strategic international partnerships in sectors of mutual interest that support sustainable development and long-term economic value creation,” he said.

By working closely with Uzbekistan, he added, the UAE aims to unlock high-quality investment opportunities across the minerals value chain for the benefit of both nations.

The agreement focuses on the development and modernization of key supporting infrastructure, including power generation, renewable energy, grid enhancements, water systems, and logistics networks.

It also aims to advance sector digitalization, innovation, and responsible governance to reinforce long-term resilience and sustainability. 

Under the MoU, cooperation will span investment activities across the full mining value chain, from exploration and development through to downstream manufacturing. 

Khodjaev emphasized that the MoU marks an important step in strengthening cooperation between Uzbekistan and the Gulf state in the minerals sector. 

“Through collaboration on investment facilitation, governance, workforce development, and monitoring frameworks, we aim to support responsible mineral development and create sustainable industrial growth opportunities for both economies,” he said. 

According to WAM, the agreement establishes a collaboration framework involving government and regulatory authorities, state-owned investment companies and private sector partners, enabling the structuring of financing mechanisms such as foreign direct investment and public-private partnerships. 

Uzbekistan’s mining sector is a key economic driver, producing commodities such as gold, copper, uranium, coal, oil, and natural gas, according to the International Trade Administration of the US Department of Commerce. 

The sector is undergoing modernization as the government expands upstream-to-downstream capacity, attracts foreign investment, and upgrades infrastructure through state-owned enterprises while tapping international capital markets.