National Post

Saudi Aramco said to tap Moelis on IPO

- Javier Blas and Dinesh Nair

• Saudi Arabian Oil Co. hired Moelis & Co. to advise on its initial public offering, according to people familiar with the matter, as it pushes ahead with plans to pursue the world’s biggest share sale.

The boutique investment bank had been shortliste­d along with Evercore Partners Inc. as a potential adviser for the deal, people familiar with the matter said last month. Aramco, as the company is known, was seeking a bank to help it select underwrite­rs for the sale, make decisions on potential listing venues and ensure the IPO goes smoothly, the people said at the time.

The mandate is a coup for New York- based Moelis, a firm founded in 2007 by former UBS Group AG dealmaker Ken Moelis. While the bank has advised on other large deals in the Middle East, such as the US$ 25billion debt restructur­ing of Dubai World LLC, this listing is its biggest-ever role.

“Transactio­ns of this magnitude clearly elevate the perception of the brand,” Devin Ryan, an analyst at JMP Securities, said in a note to clients. “Publicity from a high- profile win represents great advertisin­g for Moelis, which can have tangible benefits, as success often begets more success.”

Moelis jumped five per cent to US$ 36.75 in morning trading in New York, extending its gain in the past 12 months to 48 per cent. The company sold stock for US$ 25 a share in its 2014 initial public offering. Ryan, who has an outperform rating on Moelis, said it’s reasonable to estimate a fee for the Aramco deal could be “in the tens of millions of dollars.”

The Aramco IPO, which is predicted to raise about US$ 100 billion, would also push Moelis up in global investment bank rankings. The company ranked 28th in mergers and acquisitio­ns announced l ast year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Representa­tives for Moelis and Aramco declined to comment. Moelis is scheduled to report fourth- quart er earnings Wednesday after the close of trading in U. S. markets. The Financial Times had previously reported that Moelis won the advisory role.

Saudi Arabia is aiming to sell less than five per cent of the company as part of a plan by Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman to set up the world’s biggest sovereign wealth fund and reduce the economy’s reliance on hydrocarbo­ns. The IPO would be the largest ever, dwarfing the US$ 25 billion raised by Chinese Internet retailer Alibaba Group in 2014.

Aramco also r ecently asked banks including Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and HSBC Holdings PLC to pitch for advisory roles, people familiar with the matter said last month.

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