DUBAI: Global financiers are poised to flock to Saudi Arabia’s annual flagship investment conference next week as a tightening of the kingdom’s purse strings and a deepening of regional conflict cloud the outlook. Among those expected to descend on the Future Investment Initiative (FII) in Riyadh are top CEOs, including Goldman Sachs’ David Solomon, BlackRock’s Larry Fink, Citigroup’s Jane Fraser and the London Stock Exchange’s Julia Hoggett. The high-profile event, first held in 2017, fills an opulent hotel in the capital of the world’s top oil exporter with the aim of promoting Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s (MbS)ambitious economic agenda and demonstrating the kingdom’s influence on the global economy.

In addition to geopolitical worries over an escalating Middle East conflict, which has threatened to embroil the region’s oil facilities, the shadow of domestic belt-tightening and sputtering growth also hangs over the event’s eighth edition. The forum, which is headed by Yasir Al Rumayyan, the governor of Saudi Arabia’s nearly $1 trillion Public Investment Fund (PIF), is an opportunity for Riyadh to draw in foreign investment to support the kingdom’s massive economic overhaul known as Vision 2030. Aurangzeb explores climate financing, trade deals with global institutions But for many attendees the draw has also been Saudi Arabia’s cheque book, not just signing their own.

“Many managers are reconsidering FII. Saudi (Arabia) has clearly told t.