National Post (National Edition)

The king says no — and that’s final

SAUDI RULER TIPPED SCALE AGAINST ARAMCO IPO PLANS

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LONDON • The king spoke, and a $2-trillion dream went up in smoke.

For the past two years, Saudi Arabia has prepared to place up to five per cent of its national oil company on the stock market. Officials talked up the Saudi Aramco initial public offering (IPO) with internatio­nal exchanges, global banks and U.S. President Donald Trump.

The planned listing was to be the cornerston­e of the kingdom’s promised economic overhaul and, at a targeted $100 billion, the biggest IPO ever. It was the brainchild of 32-year-old Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, heir apparent of the world’s largest oil exporter.

But after months of setbacks, the internatio­nal and domestic legs of the IPO were pulled.

The reason: the prince’s father King Salman stepped in to shelve it, three sources with ties to government insiders told Reuters.

The decision came after the king met with family members, bankers, and senior oil executives, including a former Aramco CEO, said one of the sources, who requested anonymity. Those consultati­ons took place during Ramadan, which ended in the middle of June.

The king’s interlocut­ors told him that the IPO, far from helping the kingdom, would undermine it. Their main concern was that an IPO would bring full public disclosure of Aramco’s financial details, the sources said.

In late June, the king sent a message to his diwan, or administra­tive office, demanding that the IPO be called off, the three sources said. The king’s decision is final, a second source said.

“Whenever he says ‘no’, there is no budging,” the source said.

After Reuters reported last week that the deal had been shelved, Energy Minister Khalid al-falih said the government was committed to conducting the IPO at an unspecifie­d date in the future.

A senior Saudi official referred Reuters to that statement and repeated that the government, Aramco’s shareholde­r, was working toward an IPO when conditions were right.

“We are surprised that despite this statement, that the government continues actively to plan for the IPO, Reuters persists in asking questions alleging that plans are halted.

“Aramco’s shareholde­r is the Government of Saudi Arabia. His majesty, King Salman, has delegated management of the IPO to His Royal Highness the Crown Prince, and a Committee which includes the Ministers for Energy, Finance and Economy. Therefore, decisions around the nature and timing of the IPO, will be decided by the Committee for the Government’s approval,” the official said.

In a country ruled for decades by the Al Saud dynasty, it is not surprising that the king ultimately decides. But the shelving of the Aramco IPO is a major blow to the prince’s Vision 2030 reform program, which aims to fundamenta­lly transform Saudi Arabia’s oil-dependent, statedrive­n economy.

It suggests the king is keeping the new unilateral power of the young prince — accrued soon after his father’s accession to the throne in January 2015 — in check.

While King Salman has the final say on policy, he has given great authority to his son, who is known as MBS.

After assuming powers as defence minister and chief of the royal court in January 2015, MBS launched a war in Yemen, adopted a more assertive stance toward archrival Iran, and implemente­d a diplomatic and trade boycott of Qatar.

Taking the reins of a powerful new economic council, he set out to tighten state spending, grow the private sector and win foreign investment.

The king also allowed him to push through highprofil­e social reforms including ending a ban on women driving and opening cinemas in the deeply conservati­ve Muslim country.

MBS entered the line of succession in April 2015, replacing an uncle as deputy crown prince. Two years later, he was elevated to crown prince in a palace coup that removed his cousin Prince Mohammed bin Nayef, the interior minister.

The king has intervened at times.

Most notably, when MBS gave the impression last year that Riyadh endorsed the Trump administra­tion’s still nebulous Middle East peace plan, including U.S. recognitio­n of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, the king made a public correction.

At the Arab League summit in April, he reaffirmed Riyadh’s commitment to the Arab and Muslim identity of Jerusalem following an uproar in the Islamic world.

“The king is obsessed with the idea of how history will judge him. Will he be the king who sold Aramco, who sold Palestine?” the second source said.

It is not clear exactly which of the IPO arguments prompted King Salman to make the decisive call on Aramco.

But the sources said that even though the king’s decision was a blow to the prince’s agenda, he is still the favourite son and heir with a major influence on policy.

Rather, they say, it suggests the king wants to show he will be the deciding voice for the foreseeabl­e future.

THE KING IS OBSESSED WITH THE USEA OF HOW HISTORY WILL JUDGE HIM. WILL HE BE THE KING WHO SOLD ARAMCO, WHO SOLD PALESTINE? — ONE OF THREE GOVERNMENT­AL INSIDE SOURCES ON KING SALMAN’S DECISION TO SHELVE A $100-BILLION INITIAL PUBLIC OFFERING

 ?? LUKE MACGREGOR / BLOOMBERG ?? Mohammed bin Salman, Saudi Arabia’s crown prince, is heir apparent of the world’s largest oil exporter.
LUKE MACGREGOR / BLOOMBERG Mohammed bin Salman, Saudi Arabia’s crown prince, is heir apparent of the world’s largest oil exporter.

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