Millennium Post

Saudi Aramco buys SABIC shares on market as it completes acquisitio­n

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RIYADH/DUBAI: Stateowned Saudi Aramco bought 2.1 billion shares of Saudi Basic Industries (SABIC) on the stock market on Sunday as it completed its deal agreed last year to buy 70% of the petrochemi­cal giant, according to sources and market data.

Four transactio­ns were executed on the Saudi exchange, known as Tadawul, involving SABIC shares worth 259,125 billion riyals ($69.1) billion, Tadawal data showed, without naming the buyer.

Four sources confirmed the transactio­ns were part of the

Aramco acquisitio­n agreed in 2019 and which will be one of the biggest in the global chemical industry once completed. The shares are being sold by the Saudi sovereign fund, the Public Investment Fund (PIF), giving it more cash to invest in the government programme to diversify the economy away from oil.

Sources told Reuters in May that Aramco had been looking to restructur­e the deal after Saudi Basic Industries’s market value fell more than 40% due to an oil price slump.

Sunday’s transactio­ns suggested the deal price had not changed but it was unclear whether the structure for making payments to PIF had been revised.

Sunday’s share trades involved cross transactio­ns, also known as special deals on Tadawul, which are executed at an agreed price between a buyer and seller, without those involved.

“The deal completion is ontrack with expectatio­ns to be finalised before the end of the second quarter,” Aramco told Reuters in a statement when asked about the transactio­ns.

“We will make a completion announceme­nt in due course.” Aramco has been boosting investment­s in refining and other downstream industries. Three of Sunday’s deals were completed at 123.40 riyals per share and the fourth at 123.20 riyals, prices that were similar to last year’s agreed price of 123.39 riyals per share.

Saudi Basic Industries shares ended at 88.50 riyals on Sunday.

Aramco raised $10 billion in a loan this year to help with the SABIC acquisitio­n, sources previously said.

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