Anonymous ID: ebc774 March 22, 2018, 1:19 a.m. No.753062   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3069

Looks like the Saudi crackdown last Oct is starting to yield some bank for the locals.

 

Thousands attend auction of vehicles owned by Saudi tycoon al-Sanea

The initial funds from the auction will go to unpaid workers

 

Saudi Arabia

 

Reuters

Thousands of people attended the first day of an auction of vehicles owned by indebted Saudi Arabian tycoon Maan al-Sanea and his company, a sale which officials say will go towards repaying about SAR18bn ($4.8bn) owed to creditors.

 

Authorities say the auction, the subject of huge interest in the Eastern Province where his business is based, reflects their focus on improving corporate governance and by extension Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s commitment to economic reforms.

 

Creditors ranging from unpaid workers to local and international banks hope the process, which at a later stage will include sale of bigger assets such as property, will lead to repayment of at least part of their debt.

 

The businessman, ranked in 2007 by Forbes as one of the world’s 100 richest people, was detained by authorities late last year for unpaid debt dating back to 2009 when his company, Saad Group, defaulted on payments in what was Saudi Arabia’s biggest financial meltdown.

 

His case is separate from the dozens of Saudi businessmen and prominent figures who have been held in a corruption crackdown, although the dispute touches on similar investor concerns about Saudi corporate governance.

 

A three-judge tribunal established in 2016 to resolve Saad’s debt dispute late last year appointed a consortium called Etqaan Alliance to liquidate assets owned by the billionaire.

 

The first phase of the auction was launched this week, with around 900 vehicles including lorries, buses, diggers, forklift trucks and golf carts, owned by Saad Group, based in the city of Khobar, going under the hammer.

 

Read: Saudi Arabia to auction detained billionaire’s real estate, cars

 

Later stages of the process will include other parts of his business empire and personal wealth including property – estimated at around SAR10.3bn, as well as machinery, ceramics and furniture in auctions in the Eastern Province, Riyadh, Jeddah and Yanbu, said Abdulaziz al-Rashid, head of Etqaan Alliance, a coalition of companies including two real estate companies, accountants and lawyers.

 

After a series of TV, online and billboard adverts run by Etqaan Alliance in recent weeks anticipation about the auction has been building.

 

Roads around the auction site were jammed on Sunday afternoon as people queued to enter the dusty land plot where the event was taking place.

 

“Can you believe this man was once a billionaire and today he came to the ground level and has to start from scratch?,” said a buyer of a forklift truck, giving his first name as Nasser.

 

DUBAI MEETING

 

Prospective buyers were mainly businessmen from local construction companies and other contractors.

 

“This auction gives a clear message that the court is serious to carry out the liquidation process of all assets to repay creditors,” said al-Rashid. “We expect to finalise liquidation of all assets during this year.”

 

Money raised from the first phase of the auction, expected to be completed by the end of April, will go towards repaying creditors owed around SAR18bn, he said.

 

A further SAR30bn of debt claims hadn’t been processed by the court yet, he said.

 

Other people familiar with the sale process said the assets to be auctioned under the first phase were expected to cover around 10 to 15 per cent of the SAR18bn in claims so far recognised by the court.

 

Read: Saudi businessman al-Sanea seeks last-chance debt deal

 

Priority for the repayment would first go to repaying unpaid workers, some of whom haven’t been paid for more than a year. Vendors and other companies owed money would be given next priority, with banks at a later stage, the people said.

 

Some of the workers who hope to get paid through the liquidation process were among those attending the event.

 

Outside the court process, advisers to Saad Group recently asked some bank creditors to meet in Dubai in a bid to try to reach a consensual debt settlement on SAR16bn of claims, Reuters reported last week.

 

The advisers were seeking a deal before Saudi authorities make progress in the auction process.

 

The people familiar with the auction process said that the legal procedures were on track and would not be affected by any possible settlement Saad Group reaches with its creditors.

Anonymous ID: ebc774 March 22, 2018, 1:25 a.m. No.753086   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3209 >>3228

No one is saying what this youngish Saudi prince died of…

 

Saudi royals gather after death of Prince Bandar bin Khalid

The royal family member passed away on Monday, March 12

 

Saudi Arabia

 

Saudi Prince Jalawi bin Abdulaziz bin Musaed has received condolences at his home in Riyadh following the death of Saudi Prince Bandar bin Khalid bin Abdulaziz Al Saud.

 

The royal family member passed away on Monday, March 12, the Royal Court announced last week.

 

Read: Saudi Prince Bandar bin Khalid dies

 

State-run Saudi Press Agency posted images of the gathering at Prince Jalawi’s home on Saturday, showing dozens of royal family members offering their condolences.

 

 

These included Prince Turki Al Faisal bin Abdulaziz, Prince Khalid Bin Bandar, Prince Badr bin Fahad bin Saad, Prince Saud bin Abdullah bin Thunayan, Prince Khalid bin Turki bin Abdulaziz and minister of the national guard Prince Khalid bin Abdulaziz bin Ayyaf al-Muqrin, according to SPA.

 

 

Prince Saud bin Salman bin Mohammed, Prince Nahar bin Saud bin Abdulaziz, Prince Yusif bin Saud bin Abdulaziz, Prince Bandar bin Salman bin Mohammed, deputy Riyadh region governor Prince Mohammed bin Abdul Rahman bin Abdulaziz, deputy Najran region governor Prince Turki Bin Hathloul bin Abdul Aziz and deputy Hail region governor Prince Faisal bin Fahd bin Sultan bin Abdulaziz also attended alongside other princes and officials.

 

 

“All expressed their sincere condolences and asking the Lord to heal the deceased with mercy and forgiveness, and to inspire his family with patience and solace,” according to SPA.

Anonymous ID: ebc774 March 22, 2018, 2:08 a.m. No.753196   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3206

Just in case anyone wants to keep track of where Iran stands now and validation for Trumps stance.

 

Ahmadinejad exploits economic woes as he battles with the regime

Letters to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei from ex-president warned of the effects of the country’s economic decline

 

Iran’s former president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has challenged both the country’s Supreme Leader and the revolutionary guard militia’s stranglehold on the economy after some of his allies were detained on criminal charges.

 

The former president, who was barred from another tilt at the top job in last year’s election, has resorted to publishing open letters condemning the most powerful institutions in the country.

 

In a series of letters to Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the Supreme Leader, he warned of the effects of the country’s economic decline. He claimed stultifying role of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) in business needed to be tackled. “Do you think if I keep silent about the economic and political problems of our country they would go away by themselves?” he asked. “It is my revolutionary duty to warn that there is a widespread dissatisfaction among our nation about the performance of the system which is fast approaching the very foundations of our Islamic revolution”.

 

Mr Ahmadinejad’s camp has sought to capitalise on the growth of domestic discontent, highlighted by the nationwide street riots earlier this year, as the country’s economy has slipped deeper into a downturn.

 

MORE: This country is going down…

https:// www.thenational.ae/world/ahmadinejad-exploits-economic-woes-as-he-battles-with-the-regime-1.715046