What the
End of Saudi Arabia’s Big-Spending Era Means for the Kingdom and Beyond
The
kingdom is pulling back from a costly and high-profile golf venture amid
mounting financial concerns, raising questions about its plans.
Tariq
Panja
By Tariq
Panja
Tariq
Panja has covered Saudi Arabia’s efforts to disrupt sports since it began
spending heavily for its global ambitions.
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/01/world/middleeast/saudi-arabia-spending-sports-liv-golf.html
May 1,
2026
Updated
12:01 p.m. ET
Saudi
Arabia embarked on a nation-changing project over the past decade under a young
prince in a rush to reimagine his kingdom. The kingdom announced ambitious
ventures in sports, entertainment and other areas — all in a bid to diversify
its economy from its heavy reliance on oil exports and to remake its image from
a conservative, insular nation to a dynamic country playing on the world stage.
But in
recent years, the global ambitions of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman have
clashed with financial reality, as the state faces mounting expenses and lower
oil revenue, exacerbated by the continuing war in the Middle East. Several
major projects have recently been scaled back, mothballed or scrapped.
On
Thursday the country’s $1 trillion sovereign wealth fund announced the latest
casualty: a multibillion-dollar effort that had, when it started just four
years ago, threatened to upend global golf and become a key symbol of Saudi
Arabia’s determination to be a major player in sports.
When
launching in 2022, the upstart competition, LIV Golf, tore apart the sport’s
traditional structures by luring some of the games biggest names with the
biggest checks in the sport’s history. It also pulled in — and remunerated —
figures like President Trump and led to costly legal battles and congressional
hearings.
Now, just
four years later, Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund had said it will cease
funding the competition at the end of the year, raising questions about Saudi
plans in sports and beyond. In the fund’s most recent announcement about its
strategy for the next five years, its main focus was domestic investment.
Big-time sports was notably omitted from its list of priorities.
Sports
and entertainment have been a central component of Prince Mohammed’s broader
vision that called for futuristic new cities, vacation hubs and theme parks
built across the arid kingdom. Some of the most ambitious ideas have been
quietly scaled back, revised or put on hiatus after officials decided that they
were not commercially viable when the government faces financial strains.
For
sports, the end of an era of free Saudi spending will be bitter: A gusher of
money from the kingdom has been underpinning the sporting economy in ways
rarely seen before. Saudi investment has filled the coffers of several major
sports organizations, teams and talents, with salaries, hosting fees and
sponsorship agreements some of the highest in sports.
“The
substantial investment required by LIV Golf over a longer term is no longer
consistent with the current phase of PIF’s investment strategy,” the Public
Investment Fund said in a statement that also made reference to its “invest
priorities and current macro dynamics.”
The
fund’s governor, Yasir al-Rumayyan, who had been LIV’s chairman, and will now
leave the board, said that PIF would slow down some of its biggest projects as
it focuses on “increasing the efficiency of investments.”
The
decision follows mounting financial pressures, including the cost of Saudi
Arabia’s pledges to host the World Expo in 2030 and the men’s soccer World Cup
in 2034. The U.S.-Israeli war with Iran, which stymied oil exports through the
Strait of Hormuz and brought a slew of missiles and drone attacks on the
kingdom, has not helped.
PIF said
the fund will not divest other sports interests. Those include Newcastle
United, a team in the Premier League, the world’s richest domestic soccer
competition, and DAZN, an unprofitable sports streaming business. Other Saudi
entities have also withdrawn or canceled plans to stage sporting ventures,
including high-profile events in snooker and tennis.
“PIF
remains committed to deploying capital internationally in line with its
investment strategy, including its substantial current and future investments
in various sports as a priority sector,” the fund added.
Sports
thrust Saudi Arabia into the headlines as it went on a yearslong tear,
collecting events and top athletes for sums of money unmatched anywhere else.
Some of soccer’s biggest players, like Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi, were
enticed to either move to play there or act as pitchmen with contracts that
included promotional commitments.
Critics
lashed out at sports organizations over the kingdom’s human rights record.
FIFA, soccer’s governing body, has faced regular attacks over handing Saudi
Arabia hosting rights to the 2034 World Cup, the biggest event in sports, with
a suddenly altered bidding process.
It was
the golf investment that attracted the most significant investment. Mr.
al-Rumayyan, a keen golfer, emerged as the frontman for the project, which
enraged golf traditionalists as it lured top golfers away from top tours in the
United States and Europe with reported paychecks of more than as $400 million,
a figure that dwarfs the career earnings of even the best players.
LIV’s
largess also extended to the owners of venues around the world, a group that
includes President Trump, who has collected fees as the circuit has visited
courses he owns in New Jersey, Florida and Washington, where a LIV event was
slated to take place this month. Mr. Trump championed the new tour from the
outset, being present at its events and acting as a broker of sorts when LIV’s
battle with golf’s traditional powers was at its worst.
The
formation of LIV led to a yearlong bitter public and legal battle with the
established tours that eventually closed with an agreement to someday partner.
The partnership never materialized, leaving the future of the insurgent tour in
doubt.
Without
funding from its Saudi benefactors, it is unclear how the LIV tour will
continue operating if it doesn’t secure new investors.
The
circuit has required continuing funding from benefactors as its operations have
lost hundreds of millions of dollars every year since its inception. In 2024,
the most recent year for which its accounts are available, it lost almost $600
million on sales of less than $90 million.
A few
hours before PIF confirmed its intention to walk away from its golf project,
LIV announced new board appointments and said it was working on “securing
long-term financial partners to support its transition from a foundational
launch phase to a diversified, multi-partner investment model.”
Vivian
Nereim in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, contributed reporting.
Tariq
Panja is a global sports correspondent, focusing on stories where money,
geopolitics and crime intersect with the sports world.
.jpeg)
.jpeg)

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário