Blackrock Signals Openness To Co-Investment With Gulf Sovereign Funds In Asia
Global asset manager BlackRock has indicated it is willing to partner with sovereign wealth funds from the Gulf Cooperation Council to channel more capital into Asian markets. The company's Chief Investment Strategist for Middle East and Asia-Pacific, Ben Powell, described the firm as“very open minded” about co-investment opportunities with SWFs in the region. This marks a notable strategic shift by the world's largest asset manager, which has long maintained active investments across India and China.
Powell, who was recently relocated from Singapore to Dubai to bolster BlackRock's Middle East presence, pointed to growing capital-market reforms and regulatory liberalisation across GCC economies as key enablers. The move reflects rising demand from institutional investors for diversified exposure beyond oil and gas. He noted that loosening foreign-ownership caps, expanding capital-market infrastructure and deepening financial systems create fertile ground for international participation alongside local sovereign funds.
BlackRock's invitation to SWFs comes amid shrinking returns on traditional hydrocarbon revenue and mounting pressure on Gulf states to redirect capital toward technology, infrastructure, and private-market assets. Powell underlined that shifting Gulf economies away from bank-heavy financing toward market-based capital flows - including securitisation and equity issuance - has accelerated. In Saudi Arabia, for instance, mortgages are poised for securitisation under broader market-development goals.
From BlackRock's perspective, Asia remains a core strategic region. The firm sees long-term growth opportunities in markets like India, where rising digital adoption, growing middle-class consumption, and expanding capital markets reinforce a favourable structural outlook. Powell emphasised that Asia can benefit greatly from global megatrends such as artificial intelligence, infrastructure modernisation and asset-class diversification - trends that have deep resonance for investors aiming for long-duration returns.
See also Crescent Enterprises Unveils AED 1 Billion Investment PlanThe proposed co-investment model would allow SWFs to leverage BlackRock's global investment expertise, while BlackRock gains access to substantial Gulf capital pools. Such partnerships could involve allocations across bonds, equities, private infrastructure, and transition-linked assets - reflecting BlackRock's multi-asset approach to capture returns as financial architectures evolve.
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