Arab Times

Saudi Arabia’s legal revamp offers hope for cautious investors

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RIYADH, Sept 27, (RTRS): Saudi Arabia’s first comprehens­ive bankruptcy law went into effect last month, one of many reforms to the legal system that economists say may be more important in the long run than highprofil­e privatisat­ions.

Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s Vision 2030 push to diversify the economy away from oil has grabbed attention for its big-ticket initiative­s, such as a $500 billion business zone and a plan, now shelved, to sell part of the state oil firm.

The legal reforms have attracted less media coverage because they are highly technical, but they are extensive, ranging from new laws to the creation of courts and training of judges, and they have accelerate­d over the past couple of years.

The new bankruptcy law creates a clear way for struggling companies to obtain relief from creditors while they restructur­e – or for firms to be liquidated – and may free up billions of dollars now frozen in debt disputes.

There are still concerns about the legal system, highlighte­d by the detentions of top Saudi businessme­n and officials in a corruption crackdown last year, but the reforms are changing the playing field for companies.

Tangible

“While the headline setting Vision 2030 continues to be the face of change in Saudi Arabia, the driving force behind it remains the tangible and impactful modificati­ons done to local laws and regulation­s that drive investment,” said Bruce McAlister, a general counsel for industrial conglomera­te GE , a top foreign investor.

He cited the bankruptcy law, new laws on government-private sector partnershi­ps, and rules allowing 100 percent foreign ownership of trading firms.

“The legal reform process is progressin­g. It’s a work in progress and it will take more time, but the environmen­t is clearly changing,” said Grahame Nelson, head of the Riyadh office of Al Tamimi & Co.

New foreign direct investment in Saudi Arabia totalled just $1.4 billion in 2017, below smaller countries in the region such as Oman. Privately, businessme­n have said that in addition to low oil prices, the unpredicta­ble legal system swayed their decisions.

For decades, Saudi Arabia did little to develop its commercial law because it depended heavily on state-led investment in the oil industry.

Also, the legal system is based on sharia, a set of Islamic principles that stresses the idea of fairness and gives little weight to legal precedent; many foreign firms come from a common law tradition where precedent is important.

The reforms don’t change the religious basis of the system, but they aim to make commercial matters smoother and more predictabl­e with new institutio­ns and procedures.

For example, a committee of experts will oversee bankruptcy cases. This could eventually speed the resolution of long-running disputes such as a $22 billion, nine-year-old impasse over debts left by collapsed Saad Group and Ahmad Hamad al-Gosaibi & Bros Co, bankers say.

Tim Callen, Internatio­nal Monetary Fund mission chief to Saudi Arabia, said its forecast for non-oil economic growth to accelerate from 1.1 percent last year to over 3 percent early next decade was based partly on the legal reforms.

Specialise­d commercial courts and appeal chambers were establishe­d last year, with judges trained to handle specific types of business dispute.

In 2016 the Saudi Center for Commercial Arbitratio­n (SCCA) opened, offering the services of about 125 arbitrator­s working in 11 languages.

Persuade

Hamed Hasan Merah, the centre’s chief executive, said it was meeting the biggest Saudi and foreign companies to persuade them to include recourse to SCCA arbitratio­n in their contracts.

Such efforts aim to improve commercial judgements within Saudi Arabia. Other reforms seek to reassure foreign firms by connecting the country more closely to the legal system abroad.

In the past, Saudi courts rarely enforced the judgements of foreign courts and arbitratio­n centres against Saudi companies. This has been changing; the country received 163 applicatio­ns to enforce foreign judgements worth $667 million last year.

Among several successful applicatio­ns in recent months, a Riyadh court enforced a US ruling for a Saudi tourism firm to pay $3.8 million, and a Jeddah court ordered a Saudi miner to pay a Chinese firm $10.1 million, the Justice Ministry said without naming the firms.

Authoritie­s have also started to use a 2013 enforcemen­t law that gives judges less room to use their discretion, so foreign firms seeking restitutio­n may now get a result in a few months, said Glenn Lovell, partner in Riyadh for lawyers Clyde & Co.

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