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kaggle-ho-031627House Oversight

Emails Discussing Potential $200 Billion Saudi Money Tied Up in U.S. Private‑Equity Funds

Emails Discussing Potential $200 Billion Saudi Money Tied Up in U.S. Private‑Equity Funds The exchange references a claim that Saudi sovereign wealth (or the royal family) has withdrawn or parked roughly $200 billion in U.S. private‑equity funds, with mentions of BlackRock and lock‑up restrictions. While the figures are unverified, they point to a sizable financial flow that could be traced through fund filings, SEC disclosures, and fund‑manager interviews. The lead involves high‑profile actors (Saudi leadership, U.S. financial institutions, possible U.S. government oversight) and could generate significant controversy if substantiated. Key insights: Thomas Jr. cites a CEO of a “big finance firm” saying Saudis (SAMA) withdrew $200 Billion over the past year.; Jeffrey E. notes most Saudi money is tied up in private‑equity funds with no withdrawals allowed and limited secondary‑market activity.; Reference to BlackRock acting more as a custodian rather than an investor in these assets.

Date
Unknown
Source
House Oversight
Reference
kaggle-ho-031627
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

Emails Discussing Potential $200 Billion Saudi Money Tied Up in U.S. Private‑Equity Funds The exchange references a claim that Saudi sovereign wealth (or the royal family) has withdrawn or parked roughly $200 billion in U.S. private‑equity funds, with mentions of BlackRock and lock‑up restrictions. While the figures are unverified, they point to a sizable financial flow that could be traced through fund filings, SEC disclosures, and fund‑manager interviews. The lead involves high‑profile actors (Saudi leadership, U.S. financial institutions, possible U.S. government oversight) and could generate significant controversy if substantiated. Key insights: Thomas Jr. cites a CEO of a “big finance firm” saying Saudis (SAMA) withdrew $200 Billion over the past year.; Jeffrey E. notes most Saudi money is tied up in private‑equity funds with no withdrawals allowed and limited secondary‑market activity.; Reference to BlackRock acting more as a custodian rather than an investor in these assets.

Tags

kagglehouse-oversighthigh-importancesaudi-arabiaprivate-equityfinancial-flowsoil-price-impactnyt-investigation
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