Economy03:00 · 7m ago

Saudi Public Investment Fund Reports $17 Billion Profit Amid Heavy State Funding Dependence

Calcalist
Translated & summarized from Calcalist by baba
The story · English

Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund (PIF), the main driver behind the kingdom's Vision 2030 economic plan, announced a net profit of approximately $17 billion for 2025, more than doubling from about $7 billion in 2024. Revenues increased to around $120 billion from $110 billion the previous year, and total assets reached $1.21 trillion. Despite these impressive figures, the fund's growth heavily relies on state contributions. Government transfers to PIF rose sharply to $172 billion in 2024 from $83 billion in 2023. By mid-2025, the fund's debt and loans stood at about $54 billion. Analysis shows that over 60% of asset growth since 2021 came from government capital injections, with an additional 20% from loans and bonds, indicating that only a small portion of income and profit growth stems from actual investment returns.

This reliance raises concerns about PIF's ability to meet Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman's ambitious 2030 target of managing $2 trillion in assets. Questions also arise regarding the fund's investment decisions, particularly costly, high-profile ventures in technology and the futuristic city project Neom. The flagship component, The Line, intended as a symbol of Saudi Arabia's future economy, has become a financial and operational burden, leading PIF to withdraw from it.

Currently, PIF faces a critical juncture. While Saudi Arabia depends on the fund to diversify its economy, ongoing budget deficits and regional security pressures mean unlimited state funding is no longer sustainable. The fund must now demonstrate real returns, potentially through asset sales, profitable investments, or public offerings, to sustain its growth and fulfill national economic goals.

Read the original at Calcalist
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