Public Investment Fund to gain prominence The restructuring of the Public Investment Fund (PIF) is likely to allow greater focus on achieving a diversified foreign asset base which could support in turn the build-up of non-oil revenues. According to Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, government ownership of Saudi Aramco would be transferred to the PIF, which will be transformed into a SWF that will look to increase its overseas assets (from 5% of total to 50% of total by 2020) following its recapitalization and the proceeds of Aramco IPO. The PIF would hold on-paper a vast amount of wealth post-IPO (USS2trn, according to the Deputy Crown Prince, the bulk of which would be Saudi Aramco) as ownership of Saudi Aramco is transferred to the PIF, but it would only be able to deploy the cash proceeds of the monetized Aramco stake in the near-term, in our view. We think the PIF’s transformation is still at a relatively early stage for now. Room to grow PIF stature and budget contribution The restructuring of the PIF is likely to allow further diversification of foreign assets, which will in turn increase the share of investment income in the budget over time. We estimate that in 2015 investment income transferred to the budget stood at USS9.9bn (1.5% of GDP), which entails transfers of US$4bn from the PIF and USS5bn from SAMA. These transfers pale in comparison to the estimated budgetary contributions among main GCC peers. We estimate that the rate of return (investment income) on foreign assets of SAMA, government entities and the private sector averaged c2% over the past 8 years, which already suggests some exposure to riskier asset classes, in our view. As the PIF gains importance, it will become more prominent in the examination of the breakdown of the Saudi Net International Investment Position . Transitioning to an Abu Dhabi model It will be interesting to see how the restructuring of the PIF into an SWF works out in practice. We hypothesise that it may be that,