
Harrison Street Begins Middle East Push From Abu Dhabi
Arabian Post Staff -Dubai
Harrison Street, a US-headquartered real assets investment firm with over $56 billion in assets under management, has formally expanded into the Middle East by establishing an office within the Abu Dhabi Global Market, after receiving regulatory approval from the Financial Services Regulatory Authority. The move is being viewed as a strategic step to tap into the region's institutional capital base and aligns with Abu Dhabi's ambitions to attract global investment managers.
The firm's new office, located at ADGM's Al Sila Tower, is expected to anchor its regional operations and serve as a platform for growth across the Gulf and wider MENA region. Harrison Street becomes the latest in a line of global asset managers to choose Abu Dhabi as a regional headquarters, following similar moves by BlackRock, Brevan Howard, and Apollo Global Management. The announcement underscores the appeal of ADGM as a regulated environment that offers tax benefits, legal certainty, and direct access to sovereign wealth and pension funds.
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Christopher Merrill, co-founder and CEO of Harrison Street, described the expansion as a natural extension of the firm's long-term growth strategy. He emphasised that the company is aiming to offer institutional investors across the Middle East access to thematic investment opportunities in alternative real assets, including student housing, senior living, healthcare infrastructure, and digital assets. Merrill said the firm sees 'substantial appetite among Gulf-based investors for exposure to long-duration, inflation-protected assets with stable yield profiles.'
While Harrison Street has traditionally focused on North America and Europe, its new ADGM base signals an intention to deepen partnerships with investors in the Gulf region. The decision is also part of a broader effort to diversify funding sources and tailor strategies that align with regional priorities such as healthcare expansion, demographic shifts, and digital infrastructure.
The ADGM licence will enable Harrison Street to carry out regulated investment activities and offer tailored asset management services to qualified investors in the UAE and beyond. According to the firm's regional head, who is set to be announced in the coming weeks, the Abu Dhabi office will focus on both capital raising and direct investment origination, particularly in sectors aligned with government-backed development goals across the Gulf.
Industry observers say Abu Dhabi's financial centre has matured into a viable launchpad for international firms targeting sovereign and institutional capital. With assets under management in ADGM growing to over $1 trillion this year, the financial centre is increasingly positioning itself as a global hub for private equity, venture capital, and asset management. Harrison Street's entry follows a regulatory trend where ADGM has been accelerating approvals for asset managers, family offices, and hedge funds in a bid to rival more established global centres.
Global interest in Middle East capital pools has surged, with firms across Europe and the US actively seeking to establish an on-the-ground presence. Harrison Street's thematic investment strategy, focused on secular trends such as ageing populations and technological adoption, is seen to resonate well with Gulf investors pursuing diversification beyond traditional energy-linked assets.
Merrill indicated that the firm will look to build co-investment partnerships and joint ventures with local institutions, leveraging its experience in structuring real estate and infrastructure funds across developed markets. He also hinted at the possibility of localised strategies that may include greenfield development and operating partnerships in sectors like education and senior care, particularly in markets undergoing demographic transition such as Saudi Arabia and the UAE.
ADGM authorities welcomed the firm's entry as further validation of Abu Dhabi's rising influence in the global investment ecosystem. The financial centre has actively courted global asset managers through a mixture of regulatory reforms, dual licensing frameworks, and strategic partnerships with Abu Dhabi Investment Office and Mubadala.
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