Saturday, January 26, 2013

Yen decline could spark currency war -Kuwait wealth fund - Yahoo! News

Yen decline could spark currency war -Kuwait wealth fund - Yahoo! News

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  1. KUWAIT, Jan 26 (Reuters) - The decline of the yen could

    spark a currency war in southeast Asia, Badr al-Saad, the head

    of Kuwait's sovereign wealth fund, said in comments aired on

    Saturday.

    The Chinese economy will grow between 7.7 percent to 8

    percent over the next two years, far better than developed

    economies, al-Saad, the managing director of Kuwait Investment

    Authority (KIA), told pan-Arab network al-Arabiya at the World

    Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

    "The only fear is the decline of the yen. The decline of the

    yen could trigger a currency war in the countries of southeast

    Asia, this is the only fear we have at the moment," he said.

    The Japanese currency has weakened to about 90 per dollar

    from 80 since November on expectations Prime Minister Shinzo Abe

    will force the central bank to ease monetary policy to combat

    deflation.

    KIA has been seeking to invest more in China and China's

    foreign exchange regulator recently increased the amount which

    the KIA can invest directly in local securities markets to $1

    billion.

    Saad said that KIA has been investing in private equity

    funds where the returns are good and is shunning bonds because

    interest rates are so low.

    "We have been investing in private equity funds lately ...

    the returns are good," he said in rare public comments about the

    KIA's investment strategy. He named Texas Pacific Group and CBC

    as two of the funds the KIA has been investing in.

    He said the fund wanted to invest in upcoming infrastructure

    projects in Europe and the United States.

    "We think that these countries need to develop their

    infrastructure. We think that investments in infrastructure will

    be big in the next five years," he said.

    The KIA manages two main funds. Its Future Generations Fund

    invests abroad and had assets under management worth 73.63

    billion Kuwaiti dinars at the end of March 2012, according to

    media reports, or $261 billion at the current exchange rate.

    The KIA, which does not officially disclose assets under

    management, also manages a general reserve fund, which acts as

    the main treasurer for the government and receives all revenues.

    (Reporting by Reem Shamseddine; writing by Sylvia Westall;

    editing by Sami Aboudi and Jason Neely)

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