PIF acquires 25% of Emaar Economic City

Emaar EC transferred part of its loan - worth SR2.8 billion - from the Ministry of Finance to the PIF in exchange for company shares. (Supplied)
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Updated 27 September 2021
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PIF acquires 25% of Emaar Economic City

  • Under the investment deal, the sovereign wealth fund becomes a major shareholder in the company with a 25 percent stake

DUBAI: The Public Investment Fund has completed the acquisition of Emaar’s The Economic City, it said in a statement. 

Under the investment deal, the sovereign wealth fund becomes a major shareholder in the company with a 25 percent stake. 

Emaar EC transferred part of its loan - worth SR2.8 billion - from the Ministry of Finance to the PIF in exchange for company shares. 

The deal will “provide an opportunity to leverage synergies between EEC and PIF’s ecosystem in the real estate, manufacturing, logistics, and tourism sectors,” the fund said in a statement. 

“Our investment in EEC aligns with our broader 2021-2025 strategy, which aims to build strategic economic partnerships through PIF and unlock the capabilities of promising sectors in the Kingdom, including transportation, logistics, real estate and tourism,” Aiman Al-Mudaifer, head of PIF’s local real estate division said.

It is also in line with PIF’s goal to invest in the non-oil sectors, as part of the Kingdom’s wider push to diversify its income sources. 

Three members of the Economic City's board of directors resigned following the deal, including the managing director Ahmed Boshnak, Falih Hajaj, and Bader Ali Riza.

Joining the board are PIF executive Assim Alsuhaibani, Majed Alsorou, and Qusai Al Fakhri, the Saudi Exchange reported.


Gold slips over 1 percent on strong dollar, easing rate-cut bets

Updated 12 March 2026
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Gold slips over 1 percent on strong dollar, easing rate-cut bets

  • Chile central bank issues first gold purchase in decades
  • BMI expects silver to average $93/oz in 2026

Gold prices fell more than 1 percent on Thursday, pressured by a stronger dollar and diminishing hopes for a reduction in borrowing costs as the ongoing Iran war stoked inflation concerns.
Spot gold dipped 1.1 percent at $5,118.16 per ounce by 1:31 p.m. ET (1731 GMT). US gold futures for April delivery settled 1 percent lower at $5,125.80.
The dollar gained for a third consecutive session. The greenback is a competitive ‌safe-haven asset, and ‌a stronger US currency makes gold more ​expensive ‌for ⁠holders ​of other currencies.
“The ⁠higher dollar index, rising treasury yields and lack of interest-rate cuts are the negative factors, but the conflict in the Middle East has been generating some safe-haven flows,” said Phillip Streible, chief market strategist at Blue Line Futures.
Two tankers were ablaze in Iraqi waters in an apparent escalation in Iranian attacks that have cut off ⁠Middle East energy supplies. In reaction, oil prices ‌rose sharply for the day.
Iran will avenge ‌the blood of its martyrs, keep ​the Strait of Hormuz closed and ‌attack US bases, new Supreme Leader Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei said.
Higher crude ‌prices feed into inflation by raising transportation and production costs. Gold is considered an inflation hedge, but high interest rates weigh on it by making yield-bearing assets more attractive.
“If they can prevent oil prices from climbing ‌further, gold should be in a good place... On the bullish side for gold, the main argument is ⁠that central ⁠bank buying and steady exchange-traded fund inflows, which have remained positive all year,” Streible added.
Chile’s central bank issued its first major gold purchase since at least 2000. In February, the bank boosted its gold reserves to $1.108 billion, up from $42 million in January, equivalent to 2.2 percent of total reserves.
Elsewhere, spot silver eased 1 percent to $84.90. Prices gained more than 146 percent last year.
Analysts at BMI wrote in a note they expect silver to average $93 per ounce in 2026, with strong investment demand consolidating the gains witnessed in 2025, and offsetting price-induced ​demand destruction in solar ​panels and jewelry.
Spot platinum lost 1.1 percent to $2,145.75, and palladium fell 1 percent to $1,620.86.