Saudi Arabia’s PIF among bidders for stake in Starbucks franchise: Bloomberg

Short Url
Updated 16 February 2022
Follow

Saudi Arabia’s PIF among bidders for stake in Starbucks franchise: Bloomberg

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, Brookfield Asset Management Inc. and CVC Capital Partners are among the bidders for a stake in Alshaya Group’s Starbucks Corp. franchise, Bloomberg reported. 

Abu Dhabi’s ADQ and Mubadala Investment Co. have also submitted separate non-binding offers to buy 30 percent stake in Starbucks Corp. JPMorgan Chase & Co. is handling the selling process on behalf of the Kuwaiti conglomerate. 

Sources who wished to stay anonymous told Bloomberg that owners of Starbucks franchise have valued the business at $15 billion. However, prospective buyers value it at around $11 billion. 

GIC Pte. and Temasek Holdings Pte. and Dubai Holding LLC are other companies who have expressed interest to buy shares of Starbucks, as per the source. 

Alshaya, founded in 1890 is touted to be the oldest company in Kuwait. Starbucks, based in Seattle is Alshaya’s biggest franchise. 


Saudi Arabia’s industrial production jumps 10.4% in January: GASTAT

Updated 18 sec ago
Follow

Saudi Arabia’s industrial production jumps 10.4% in January: GASTAT

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s industrial production index rose to 115 in January, up 10.4 percent from a year earlier, driven by higher crude output and stronger mining activity, official data showed. 

The latest report released by the General Authority for Statistics showed that the annual surge was primarily fueled by a 13.3 percent jump in the mining and quarrying sub-index, which includes oil production.  

Saudi Arabia raised crude oil output to 10.1 million barrels per day in January from 8.9 million barrels per day a year earlier, supporting growth in the mining and quarrying sub-index and contributing to the broader expansion in industrial activity. 

The latest IPI figures underscore continued momentum in the Kingdom’s industrial sector as Saudi Arabia pursues economic diversification under its Vision 2030 agenda. 

The manufacturing sector, a key pillar of the Kingdom’s economic diversification efforts, also contributed positively to the annual growth. The manufacturing sub-index rose by 6.8 percent compared to January of the previous year.  

This was underpinned by strong performances in the manufacture of chemicals and chemical products, which grew by 10.6 percent, and the manufacture of coke and refined petroleum products, which increased by 9.1 percent. The food products industry also saw an annual growth of 9.1 percent. 

The water supply, sewerage, and waste management activities recorded the highest annual growth among the major sectors, increasing by 11.7 percent. 

Despite the strong year-on-year performance, the IPI showed a slight contraction on a monthly basis, decreasing by 0.5 percent compared to December 2025. This decline was driven by a 1.4 percent drop in the manufacturing sub-index from the previous month.  

The monthly downturn in manufacturing was largely attributed to decreases in the same sectors that fueled its annual growth, with coke and petroleum products down 1.1 percent and chemicals down 1.2 percent. 

A breakdown by main economic activities shows that the index for oil activities jumped 12.5 percent annually, while non-oil activities also posted a healthy gain of 5.3 percent.  

On a monthly basis, both indices saw minor declines, with oil activities dipping 0.1 percent and non-oil activities falling by 1.5 percent. 

The electricity, gas, and air conditioning supply sub-index was the only major sector to record an annual decrease, falling by 1.3 percent compared to January 2025.