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Bahrain draws $250mln in investments from UK-based companies
Bahrain draws $250mln in investments from UK-based companies

Zawya

time10-07-2025

  • Business
  • Zawya

Bahrain draws $250mln in investments from UK-based companies

Bahrain has attracted more than $250 million in investment from UK-based companies in the past three years (2022-2024) spanning key sectors, including financial services, ICT, education and tourism. According to the Bahrain Economic Development Board (Bahrain EDB), this milestone achievement underscores the country's growing appeal as a strategic investment destination and highlights the strengthening economic ties between Bahrain and the UK. This was revealed during a visit to the UK aimed at showcasing Bahrain's investment opportunities to British businesses and investors. Led by Sustainable Development Minister and Bahrain EDB chief executive Noor Al Khulaif, the delegation features senior officials from the national investment promotion agency engaging in meetings in London with potential investors and participating in curated events focused on trends in manufacturing and logistics over five days from Monday to Friday. Ms Al Khulaif said: 'Bahrain has long cultivated strong global partnerships, with a focus on economic co-operation and trade. The inclusion of the United Kingdom in the Comprehensive Security Integration and Prosperity Agreement, along with the recent signing of the Strategic Investment and Collaboration Partnership (SIP2) with Bahrain in June 2025, will support economic growth and job creation in both countries marking a significant milestone – deepening our collaboration across security, economic integration, and technological innovation.' She added: 'Bahrain remains a trusted gateway for UK companies seeking growth in the Middle East, backed by a business-friendly environment, agile regulation, and high-growth sectors. The increased confidence from UK investors is a testament to our enduring partnership, and we look forward to building on this momentum.' During the visit, the Bahrain EDB, in collaboration with the Financial Times, will curate two panel discussions about 'Shaping the Next Generation of Manufacturing and Logistics Hubs'. Both sessions will explore global shifts in tariffs, supply chains, technology and sustainability, emphasising how companies are re-evaluating and relocating manufacturing and logistics hubs to optimise resources and market responsiveness. Bahrain's longstanding relationship with the UK continues to deepen across multiple priority sectors. The two nations recently signed a second Strategic Investment and Collaboration Partnership (SIP2) involving over £2 billion in investment from the Bahraini private sector, targeting carbon reduction and sustainable development projects. Bilateral non-oil trade saw a significant growth of 45 per cent in 2024, reaching $645m compared to $443m in 2023. Prominent UK companies operating in Bahrain include Standard Chartered, HSBC, Howden, Deloitte, EY, Reckitt Benckiser, PwC, the University of Strathclyde, and Conexus Resources Group. Copyright 2022 Al Hilal Publishing and Marketing Group Provided by SyndiGate Media Inc. (

Boxing clever for the London market
Boxing clever for the London market

Times

time25-06-2025

  • Business
  • Times

Boxing clever for the London market

Is the London stock market finally fighting back? Two days after Primary Health Properties gazumped KKR in the bid for Assura, look at this: Tritax Big Box Reit giving the shareholders of Warehouse Reit a shedload of reasons to turn down an offer from Blackstone. Who says UK-listed companies are too timid to take on big US cash buyers? Selling out to Blackstone for £470 million cash, at 109p a share, never looked great for Warehouse. Since its September 2017 float, it has raised £425 million equity from investors to build a portfolio spanning 6.9 million sq ft: one ostensibly valued at £805 million and with an annual rent roll of £42.5 million. It's in a go-go bit of the market, too: multi-let warehouses in urban locations, used by everyone from light manufacturers to ecommerce groups, where, thanks to planning constraints, demand outweighs supply. And, yet, here was the board, chaired by Neil Kirton, rolling over to Blackstone for a price at a 14.8 per cent discount to Warehouse's net asset value of 128p a share. In some ways it was worse than that, too. The board had succumbed even after the US asset manager cut its proposed 113½p offer after a row over Warehouse's Radway Green site near Crewe. You don't have to be a shed aficionado, like Lord Cameron of Greensill, say, ensconced in his shepherd's hut, to spot how that sort of stock market exit for Warehouse was all a bit subpar. So, the board can thank Big Box for making things more interesting. Its chairman Aubrey Adams has delivered an alternative that would create a bigger, complementary listed business. Big Box is offering 0.4236 new shares for each of Warehouse's, 47.2p per share cash, and two quarterly 1.6p dividends: a total 114¼p a share, or £485 million. Warehouse investors would take a chunk of cash and still hold 6.8 per cent of the bigger business, sharing in the upside and a swift £5.5 million of annual cost synergies. In short, enough for the Warehouse board to switch its recommendation to a Big Box bid at a 4.8 per cent premium to Blackstone's. True, that didn't last long: Big Box shares fell 3 per cent to 146½p, repricing its offer at 112½p, just below Warehouse's 112¾p closing price, up 6 per cent. And, of course, Blackstone can afford to come back: the private equity and real estate giant is valued at $170 billion-plus. Yet, do long-term investors really want to cash out at a price well below NAV, even if it is much less than the one-third discount Warehouse was trading at before Blackstone pitched up? Thanks to the share element of Big Box's bid, it was able to argue that, based on its own NAV of 185.6p per share, its offer was at a mere 1.7 per cent discount to Warehouse's NAV. Shore Capital analysts reckon the Big Box bid is 'in tune with shareholder objectives' of 'long-term value over short-term cash'. And, while sell-side analysts have vested interests in keeping companies on the stock market, Shore has a case that the deal looks 'a good outcome' for both sides, with a bigger Big Box extending its 'offering' into 'last-mile urban' — a market it's been pursuing, as last year's purchase of UK Commercial Property Reit showed. Box clever and it could yet deliver a better outcome for the UK market, too. So much for conserving energy. Global demand for every sort hit fresh records last year, in what looks a blow for the green lobby: far from displacing fossil fuels, renewable power is, for now, merely adding to them, with carbon emissions up again (page 38). Who's crunched the numbers? The Energy Institute, whose annual review, showing a 2 per cent rise in total energy demand to a record 592 exajoules, is aglow with highlights. Take this eyecatcher: for the first time since 2006, world production of coal, oil, gas, renewables, hydro and nuclear hit all-time highs last year. So, even if wind and solar power did expand by 16 per cent — nine times faster than total energy demand — it still wasn't enough to 'counterbalance rising demand elsewhere'. The upshot? Fossil fuel use rose 1 per cent, still making up 86.6 per cent of total demand, with emissions up 1 per cent: the fourth high in four years. Amid that, China played the role of main goodie and baddie: the 'paradox', as the institute's Nick Wayth put it, of being 'both the world's biggest driver of clean energy growth and its largest source of emissions'. It was responsible for more than 60 per cent of all extra solar and wind capacity last year but still 'generated nearly 60 per cent of its electricity' from coal. Meanwhile, even before the arrival of a 'drill, baby, drill' president, US oil production hit a new record of more than 20 million barrels a day to all but equal the combined output of Saudi Arabia and the Russian Federation. Electricity demand growth, at 4 per cent, outpaced energy demand. But, with governments struggling to balance affordability, supply security and decarbonisation, you can see why Wayth calls it a 'disorderly transition', with emissions still moving 'in the wrong direction'. You don't have to be a Muppet to spot it's not easy being green. Another day, another ridiculing for Rachel Reeves's claims that her budget did not affect 'working people'. This time it's from the British Chambers of Commerce, whose director general, Shevaun Haviland, will today unveil a survey of more than 570 businesses. Its key finding? That a third of them have 'either made staff redundant or are planning to as a direct result of the national insurance contributions increase'. Maybe they're not the sort of working people the chancellor had in mind.

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