Sanabil buys 20 percent of Almana General Hospitals

Updated 14 February 2016
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Sanabil buys 20 percent of Almana General Hospitals

ALKHOBAR: Saudi Arabia’s government-owned fund Sanabil Investments has acquired a 20 percent stake in Ebrahim Mohammed Almana & Brothers Co, the owner of the Almana General Hospitals (AGH), a statement from one of the advisers said.
No financial terms were disclosed in the statement from GIB Capital, the financial adviser to AGH, but it said the transaction formed part of Sanabil’s strategy to invest in, and to help diversify, the Saudi economy.
Wholly owned by the Public Investment Fund (PIF), Sanabil was set up in 2009 with 20 billion riyals ($5.33 billion) of initial capital and a mandate to invest in less conservative assets — as opposed to the kingdom’s traditional stance which has been to park large sums in low-risk US Treasuries.
The Almana transaction was Sanabil’s third direct investment in the Kingdom in the past 12 months, the statement said.
Healthcare in the Gulf has drawn significant investor interest in recent months, as institutions seek to tap into a sector booming due to rising wealth coupled with an increase in conditions such as diabetes.
Among the largest of these is a tie-up between UAE-based Al-Noor Hospitals and Mediclinic International, with the South African firm acquiring Al-Noor through a reverse takeover worth around $2.2 billion.
AGH, focused on the Kingdom’s Eastern Province, was targeting a listing on the Saudi bourse and had appointed GIB to help with the process, sources told Reuters in November 2013.
It was unclear what the transaction means for any public share sale: Saudi companies will often sell a stake to private investors before floating on the exchange, although the substantial drop in oil prices in the past 18 months has wiped billions of dollars of value from the exchange, souring sentiment among investors and prospective applicants.


Second firm ends DP World investments over CEO’s Epstein ties

Updated 12 February 2026
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Second firm ends DP World investments over CEO’s Epstein ties

  • British International Investment ‘shocked’ by allegations surrounding Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem
  • Decision follows in footsteps of Canadian pension fund La Caisse

LONDON: A second financial firm has axed future investments in Dubai logistics giant DP World after emails surfaced revealing close ties between its CEO and Jeffrey Epstein, Bloomberg reported.

British International Investment, a $13.6 billion UK government-owned development finance institution, followed in the footsteps of La Caisse, a major Canadian pension fund.

“We are shocked by the allegations emerging in the Epstein files regarding (DP World CEO) Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem,” a BII spokesman said in a statement.

“In light of the allegations, we will not be making any new investments with DP World until the required actions have been taken by the company.”

The move follows the release by the US Department of Justice of a trove of emails highlighting personal ties between the CEO and Epstein.

The pair discussed the details of useful contacts in business and finance, proposed deals and made explicit reference to sexual encounters, the email exchanges show.

In 2021, BII — formerly CDC Group — said it would invest with DP World in an African platform, with initial ports in Senegal, Egypt and Somaliland. It committed $320 million to the project, with $400 million to be invested over several years.