Skip to content Skip to Search
Skip navigation

Gulf SWFs named as potential suitors of The Ivy

The Ivy outlet in London Petra Figueroa/SOPA Images
The Ivy name now appears on a host of outlets in the Ivy Brasserie and Ivy Cafe chains
  • £1bn price tag on restaurant chain
  • Sale expected by end of June
  • Ex-PM of Qatar currently owns 50%

Gulf sovereign wealth funds are among a host of buyers said to be interested in taking charge of the group behind the UK’s prestigious Ivy restaurant.

A £1 billion ($1.26 billion) sale is expected to be complete by the end of June.

Troia, the company that owns the Ivy and some 50 other restaurants, is 50 percent owned by Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim bin Jaber al-Thani, the former prime minister of Qatar.

The other half of Troia is owned by the British businessman Richard Caring.

A report in The Times said the sheikh was looking for a complete sale, while Caring was hoping to sell half of his stake and retain a 25 percent interest in the company.



Troia’s holdings include the Ivy Asia, Ivy Brasserie and Ivy Café brands, Granary Square and the Brasserie of Light at Selfridges. The flagship Ivy restaurant, in the heart of London’s theatreland, has been attracting celebrities for around a century.

As many as 10 sovereign wealth funds and family offices are said to have registered interest in the sale, including the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority (ADIA) and Mubadala.

AGBI has contacted ADIA, Mubadala and The Ivy Collection for comment.

Gabrielle Mather, founder and CEO of the business consultancy Restaurant Secrets, said larger organisations were realising that the food and beverage industry “is very lucrative if played right and with sufficient capex and budgets to sustain a longer ROI period for investors”.

“These funds don’t invest lightly and they usually have expertise on board that can spend the time for due diligence and discern the potential risks involved with a major move like this.”

HSBC has been charged with overseeing the sale.

Troia had earnings of £55 million before interest, taxation, depreciation and amortisation in 2022.

Latest articles

A Diwali celebration held during Expo 2020 in Dubai. GCC officials want to work together to prevent event clashes

Tourism chiefs call for GCC-wide events calendar

Gulf Cooperation Council nations should co-ordinate their event schedules to avoid overlaps and entice tourists to make multiple stops in the region, officials have said at the Arabian Travel Market conference. The six GCC governments – Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the UAE – are exploring ways to co-operate on tourism, including a […]

The Saudi Coffee Company launched a model farm in Jazan in November 2023 and will invest SAR1 billion ($270 million) in the sector over the next decade

PIF unit launches first Saudi coffee producer

Saudi Arabia’s coffee exports are poised for major uplift as a unit of the Public Investment Fund (PIF), the kingdom’s sovereign wealth fund, received approval to set up the country’s first coffee-production unit. The Royal Commission for Jubail and Yanbu President Khalid Al-Salem granted the Saudi Coffee Company a license to establish a coffee-production factory […]

Watching the launch of the Hope Mars probe at the Mohammed bin Rashid Space Centre. The centre's assistant director says private sector involvement is essential

Private sector ‘always better’ says UAE space industry head

The UAE is working to lure greater private sector participation in its space industry, according to an official from the Mohammed Bin Rashid Space Centre.  “We are putting a lot of effort towards including the private sector in our projects,” Mohammad Al Ghafri, assistant director general of the aerospace engineering sector at MBRSC, said this […]

illegal pilgrims Mecca Saudi Arabia

Illegal Hajj pilgrims risk fines and deportation

Fines for Saudi nationals and deportation for foreign residents taking part in the Hajj pilgrimage without a permit have been announced by the country’s interior ministry. Those who help illegal pilgrims also face jail as the kingdom tries to impose stricter controls over the annual rites.  A fine of SAR10,000 ($2,700) will be issued against […]