Finance Titans Bet Mideast Resilience Will Outweigh War Fallout

Late last month, Blackstone Inc. announced the first inbound Gulf private equity deal since Iran started attacking Middle Eastern hubs, while Citigroup Inc.’s top boss fired off a 600-word memo underlining the bank’s enthusiasm for its business in the region.

Blackstone’s $250 million commitment, hailed as a “masterstroke” by an executive at a rival firm, and Jane Fraser’s note came just as the United Arab Emirates’ carefully-cultivated image of safety and stability was facing a test.

Despite those “near-term headwinds,” Blackstone sees significant opportunity to deploy capital at scale in the UAE, the firm’s President and Chief Operating Officer Jon Gray said at the time. Days later, soon after the US and Iran agreed to a two-week ceasefire, it unveiled another deal.

For years, Wall Street has been focused on expanding in the Middle East as the region’s sovereign wealth funds cut ever bigger checks, injecting life into an otherwise dour dealmaking market. But with Iran aiming missiles at major cities across the Gulf, executives have spent weeks grappling with one question: what happens when the region that drove the boom becomes the source of the risk?

So far, they’re rushing to establish themselves as loyal partners — keen not to alienate the oil-rich region that’s long been a lucrative source of funding, and with an eye on the next wave of business.

“Our support is unwavering,” Goldman Sachs Group Inc. Chief Executive Officer David Solomon told Bloomberg News. “Our clients’ ambitions across the region haven’t changed.”

At the heart of it, the titans of finance are betting that even a prolonged conflict won’t derail privatizations, delay asset sales or push wealth funds to redirect capital inward. Instead, they hope Gulf governments will seize the moment, as they have in past crises, and use their oil wealth to play an even bigger role.

Indeed, even amid the war, regional investors continued to deploy billions in transactions spanning alternative asset managers, private credit and technology platforms.