Saudi PIF Targets Surge in Japanese Investment to Fuel Post-Oil Growth Strategy
Public Investment Fund aims to raise investments in Japan to $27 billion by 2030 under new five-year diversification plan
Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund is intensifying efforts to attract more Japanese companies and investment as part of its economic diversification drive beyond oil.
The governor of the Public Investment Fund (PIF), Yasir Al‑Rumayyan, said during the Future Investment Initiative Priority summit in Tokyo that the kingdom seeks to revive Japan as “one of the largest partners” for Saudi investment.
The PIF has already channelled about $11.5 billion into Japan between 2017 and 2024 and plans to raise that total to roughly $27 billion by 2030.
The renewed push forms a core part of the PIF’s freshly approved five-year strategy, which shifts focus from real-estate projects toward sectors such as logistics, mineral extraction, religious tourism and artificial intelligence.
PIF leaders argue that Japanese industrial know-how and global business presence make Japanese firms ideal partners for Saudi Arabia’s ambitious transformation.
PIF’s outreach to Japan—particularly to financial institutions and manufacturing companies—echoes earlier agreements including memoranda of understanding signed with major Japanese banks, underscoring Riyadh’s aim to deepen long-term capital flows and collaboration.
The move also aligns with Saudi Arabia’s broader plan under Vision 2030 to reduce dependence on oil and develop a diversified, innovation-led economy.
By offering a stable investment environment and large-scale projects, Riyadh hopes to attract Japanese firms building logistics networks, mineral-processing facilities, tourist infrastructure or AI-driven platforms.
For Japan, the deal represents an opportunity to participate in high-growth sectors of a major Middle Eastern economy.
For Saudi Arabia, re-engaging a historically important partner reflects a strategic recalibration—balancing global outreach with the practical goal of securing foreign direct investment to meet the kingdom’s evolving economic needs under Vision 2030.