Qatar banks' exposure to UK totals $6.39bln: CEBR
Qatari banks' exposure to the UK totalled about £4.8bn with investments and credit facilities accounting for a significant portion of this exposure, according to the UK-based Centre of Economics and Business Research (CEBR).
Transactions through Qatar-issued cards in the UK totalled £966mn during 2023 from more than 8.5mn transactions, reflecting the "significant" consumer spending, said CEBR in its report, which was recently unveiled here.
The Qatar Central Bank (QCB) holds substantial investments in the UK, where the British pound (GBP) is the fifth-largest reserve currency in the QCB's foreign reserve portfolio, amounting to £1.63bn (2.87% of its total foreign currency reserves), said CEBR report.
The QCB has also maintained a gold custody account with the Bank of England for decades. As of November 2024, the QCB's total investment in the UK stands at about £7.8bn, including £6.9bn in gold custody and £240.9mn in UK Treasury Notes.
Furthermore, the QCB statistics on financial exchanges between the UK and Qatar highlight the significant scale of economic interactions between the two countries.
Remittances from Qatar to the UK were at £303.3mn, sent by nearly 15,000 workers, underscoring the economic presence of the UK expatriates in Qatar and the role of remittances in supporting investment, savings, and consumption in the UK.
"The steady volume of remittances highlights the presence of a significant UK workforce in Qatar. Remittances often facilitate investments, savings, and consumption in the UK, further reinforcing bilateral financial engagement," the report said.
The financial services sector was the only one in which Qatar made an investment and later divested during the 2008–22 study period. Qatar acquired a stake in the London Stock Exchange Group (LSEG) in 2009 and reduced its stake under the eligible threshold in 2019.
LSEG proved to be one of Qatar's most impactful investments on the UK economy. Between 2009 and 2019, the business generated £7.4bn in turnover and £5.1bn in gross value added, while supporting an average of 1,221 full time employment jobs, and paying employees £1.8bn in compensation.
The report also said Qatar has committed up to £10bn over five years (starting in 2022) to invest in key UK sectors such as fintech, zero-emission vehicles, life sciences, and cybersecurity. This initiative is expected to drive economic growth, create high-quality jobs, and strengthen the bilateral relationship between the two countries.
Qatar's diverse UK portfolio includes major real estate developments, such as the upcoming Chancery Rosewood hotel in Mayfair (opening in 2025) and the redevelopment of 8 Canada Square into a sustainable mixed-use destination (beginning in 2027).
Additionally, Qatar Investment Authority's (QIA) £500mn investment in Severn Trent aims to enhance environmental performance and create 7,000 jobs across the Midlands, demonstrating Qatar's sustained commitment to supporting regional development, innovation, and infrastructure enhancement in the UK.
© Gulf Times Newspaper 2022 Provided by SyndiGate Media Inc. (Syndigate.info).
Santhosh V. Perumal

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Khaleej Times
5 hours ago
- Khaleej Times
Defence or environment? Britain faces spending choices
Torn between growing geopolitical tensions and constrained public finances, Britain's finance minister Rachel Reeves is set to unveil feared trade-offs in a government spending review on Wednesday. Prime Minister Keir Starmer is boosting the defence budget, and reports point to National Health Service (NHS) being bolstered — forcing other key ministries to tighten their belts. "Sharp trade-offs are unavoidable," said the Institute for Fiscal Studies, a respected think tank, of the Labour government's spending plans through to 2029-2030. Reeves, the chancellor of the exchequer, is to detail day-to-day spending plans in her review to parliament on Wednesday. Ahead of the announcement, the government on Monday reversed a policy to scrap a winter heating benefit for millions of pensioners, following widespread criticism, including from within its own party. Labour will raise the income threshold for receiving the subsidy, which "extends eligibility to the vast majority of pensioners", or nine million people, the Treasury said in a statement. The policy to remove the allowance from millions of pensioners began this winter and followed the government's inaugural budget in October featuring tax rises and big spending announcements on infrastructure. Since Labour won power last July, sweeping aside years of Conservative Party rule, it has unveiled also contested cuts to disability welfare payments, hoping to save more than £5 billion ($6.8 billion) by 2030. Thousands of protestors gathered in central London on Saturday, many holding placards that read "tax the rich, stop the cuts -- welfare not warfare". The government on Sunday announced £86 billion of investment in science and technology and defence by 2030. Reeves hopes the spending will boost sluggish growth, which risks added pressure from the tariffs trade war unleashed by US President Donald Trump. Reeves is set to announce a funding boost of up to £30 billion for the NHS, according to The Times newspaper. Britain's media has in recent days reported on tough, last-minute discussions between the Treasury and the interior ministry, particularly regarding the police budget, as well as with the energy department amid fears for the UK's carbon-reduction commitments. - Defence priority - Reeves has amended her fiscal rules to allow the government more headroom for investment in the run-up to the spending review. At the same time, she wishes to balance the books so that tax revenues match day-to-day spending, meaning the government borrows only to invest. The chancellor has allowed the Treasury to borrow more, particularly for infrastructure projects across the vital housing and energy sectors. This has handed her a windfall of £113 billion over five years. "When it comes to capital spending, government investment is set to be sustained at historically high levels in the coming years," the IFS noted. "If spent well, this should help contribute to growth and to better public services in years to come." Citing Russia's invasion of Ukraine, London has announced it will increase its defence budget to 2.5 percent of UK gross domestic product by 2027 -- and up to 3.0 percent by 2034, helped by cutting international aid. "While going for growth and fixing the NHS will still be central to the Spending Review, bolstering the nation's defence is now considered an urgent pressing need," said Susannah Streeter, head of money and markets at Hargreaves Lansdown. While seeking to cut costs, it has been reported that the government may later this year announce plans to lift a cap on child benefits, also after a backlash over the policy from some of its party members. "U-turns on benefit and welfare spending, increased pressure to ramp up defence spending and higher borrowing costs have left the chancellor, Rachel Reeves, in a sticky position", concluded Ruth Gregory, deputy chief UK economist at Capital Economics. "If she wishes to avoid a political backlash and/or an adverse reaction in the financial markets, she probably has little choice but to raise taxes in the Autumn Budget." The government has already hiked a business tax that entered into force in April.


Zawya
6 hours ago
- Zawya
QBS Software signals major META Push
Five recent acquisitions create the region's broadest software delivery platform and pave the way for aggressive growth in the UAE, KSA and Qatar. London, Johannesburg, Istanbul & Dubai – QBS Software, the EMEA-wide software delivery platform, today issued a formal statement outlining its sharpened strategic focus on enterprise software and advanced cybersecurity across the Middle East, Turkey and Africa (META). Since mid-2023 the Group has completed five targeted take-overs to assemble a best-of-breed vendor line-up and local execution capability: Year Company (HQ) Key Vendor Relationships Strategic Fit 2025 Prianto Turkey (Istanbul) OpenText, Quest, SUSE Enterprise software depth, cloud migration 2025 Elmer (Ankara) Check Point, OpenText, Trend Micro, TeamViewer Turkish & wider METAA reach, 1 000+ resellers 2024 Titus Corp (Johannesburg) JetBrains, TeamViewer, Minitab Pan-SADC coverage, SaaS breadth 2024 Maxtec (Johannesburg) Fortinet, Thales, Qualys Cyber-security VAD, SOC expertise 2023 InfoNet (Istanbul) Check Point, Trend Micro, Forcepoint Next-gen security, Turkish government credentials These moves, combined with QBS's 12 000-publisher global marketplace, give regional partners instant access to an expanded solution stack for, Cybersecurity Transformation & Zero-Trust Architectures, Enterprise Infrastructure & Cloud Management, Generative AI-Enhanced Security Analytics, Governance, Risk & Compliance (GRC), Managed Security & IT Services, IT Asset Management & Cost Optimisation Dave Stevinson, Group CEO, QBS Software, said: 'META is a key region for expansion and we are seeking to rapidly grow our position in the UAE, KSA and Qatar over the next four years. By uniting specialist distributors under the QBS umbrella we can deliver the deepest enterprise-software catalogue, the strongest cybersecurity bench and the optimum software delivery platform anywhere in the region.' QBS's META operations already employ more than 250 specialists across six countries and are tracking double-digit organic growth. The Group expects annualised regional revenues to exceed US $150 million in FY 2026 on its journey toward the broader US $1 billion global milestone. About QBS Software Founded in 2017, QBS Software provides the world's largest dedicated enterprise software delivery platform. The company serves 6 000 channel partners in 40 countries, helping them source, license and support solutions from over 12 000 ISVs while upholding stringent ESG standards and a B-Corp accreditation.


Al Etihad
6 hours ago
- Al Etihad
High-level trade talks between China and US kick off in London
9 June 2025 17:59 LONDON (dpa)Businesses and policymakers are watching closely as high-level trade talks between the United States and China began in London on Monday, with hopes of defusing tensions between the world's largest has dispatched Vice Premier He Lifeng for the negotiations while the United States is to be represented by Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and Trade Representative Jamieson state media reported the talks kicked off on Monday afternoon.A spokesperson for the British government confirmed only that the meeting will take place in the UK and that the country "welcomes the dialogue."Issues up for discussion are likely to include US restrictions on the sale of high-tech products to China, and China's restrictions on the export of rare earth minerals, where it dominates the global President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping agreed on the meeting in a phone call on is the first since a meeting in Switzerland in May when tariffs on both sides were cut back to Trump, the talks will focus on the details of the May trade agreement. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt called on China to keep its side of the agreement to pave the way for a more comprehensive the phone call between the two presidents, China has also called on the US to stick to the agreement, while refraining from criticism. Beijing has urged the US to evaluate objectively the progress made and withdraw negative measures directed at China.