Blackstone Inc. is planning to invest as much as US$500 billion ($642.84 billion) in Europe over the next 10 years, Chief Executive Officer Steve Schwarzman said in an interview to mark the 25th anniversary of the alternative asset manager’s operations in London.
“We see it as a major opportunity for us,” Schwarzman said in a Bloomberg Television interview on Tuesday. “They are starting to change their approach here, which we think will result in higher growth rates. So this has worked out amazingly well for us.”
Schwarzman’s comments are the latest sign of investment firms touting the attractiveness of Europe. At last week’s SuperReturn International conference in Berlin, executives from behemoths such as BC Partners, Permira and Brookfield Asset Management talked up the case for Europe as an investment destination as global economic risks mount.
When Blackstone opened its London office in 2000, the firm’s only other office was in New York, according to a statement at the time. Then, it had raised more than US$13 billion for discretionary investment funds focused on alternative asset classes.
Today, it is the world’s largest alternative asset manager, with more than US$1 trillion in assets under management and offices in 27 cities around the world, according to its website.
The firm’s London office, which is due to move to a new building that’s currently under construction on Berkeley Square in Mayfair, now employs 650 people, Schwarzman said. The firm has about US$100 billion invested in the UK already, making it one of the largest foreign investors in the country, he added.
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Blackstone has poured capital into UK real estate bets, including a site for a data center in the north of England that has the potential to be Europe’s largest.
“The UK government has been really helpful, really focused to make that happen,” Schwarzman said.
Outside Europe, Blackstone is also looking to the Middle East as an investment destination, rather than simply a region in which it has raised vast sums of capital. While the region has traditionally been dominated by local businesses and capital, the rapid growth of cities including Riyadh and Dubai as international hubs is making it an attractive opportunity, he said.