(Adds confirmation from source, comments)
By Ron Bousso
LONDON, April 9 (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia's sovereign wealth
fund, the Public Investment Fund (PIF), has accumulated stakes
in four major European oil companies, a source familiar with the
transaction said.
The four are Royal Dutch Shell, France's Total
, Norway's Equinor and Italy's Eni,
the source said, confirming a Wall Street Journal report.
The source did not confirm the combined value of the stakes,
which the WSJ reported were worth $1 billion.
"The Saudis have been buying every day almost for the past
few weeks, specially since the share prices of many of these
companies were in correction territory and dividend yields were
very high," the source familiar with the transactions said.
"They've been buying on the basis that everything is much
cheaper and that they are bullish on the long-term outlook for
oil prices," the source said, adding PIF had bought into other
companies which do not require disclosure too, the source added.
Equinor, Total and Shell declined to comment. PIF did not
reply to a request for comment.
PIF's purchases come during a global oil and gas industry
downturn, as demand has slumped during the coronavirus outbreak.
PIF is Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman's vehicle for
boosting Saudi Arabian investments at home and abroad, as he
seeks to diversify the kingdom's oil-heavy economy.
The fund manages over $300 billion in assets and has stakes
in Uber and electric car company Lucid Motors.
It has also allocated $45 billion to SoftBank's
$100 billion Vision Fund. On Monday, it disclosed an 8.2% stake
in cruise operator Carnival Corp.
(Additional reporting by Saeed Azhar in Dubai, Benjamin Mallet
in Paris, Terje Solsvik mailto:Terje.Solsvik@thomsonreuters.com
in Oslo and Kanishka Singh in Bengaluru; Editing by Alexander
Smith)