The Jerusalem Post

Aramco IPO value still hazy

- • By SAEED AZHAR, STANLEY CARVALHO and RON BOUSSO

Saudi Aramco’s blockbuste­r listing remained shrouded in mystery on Monday, a day after the company finally announced its plans, with scant details disclosed and expert valuations varying wildly from around $1.2 trillion to $2.3t.

The state oil giant, the world’s most profitable company, fired the starting gun on a domestic initial public offering (IPO) on Sunday after a series of false starts that had kept the investment world guessing.

However potential investors, already rattled by a crippling attack on Aramco’s facilities in September, were not given key details usually included in such “intention to float notices” – such as how much of the company will be sold, and when the sale will happen.

Now fund managers are poring over bank research about the famously secretive company, but little certainty has been provided by even analysts from the Wall Street giants with roles in the Riyadh bourse listing, five sources told Reuters.

Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has said he wants a $2t. valuation, seeking to raise billions in the IPO to diversify his economy away from oil.

That figure is almost twice that of Microsoft, currently the world’s most valuable listed company and seven times that of Exxon Mobil, the most valuable listed oil major by market cap.

Analysts from banks working on the deal have met with Aramco’s management in Dhahran over the past month to get more informatio­n on the company, but their valuations of Aramco still vary by around $1t.

Bank of America Merrill Lynch has a range of $1.2t. to $2.3t. while EFG Hermes says $1.55t. to $2.1t., two fund managers who have seen the research reports said.

Goldman Sachs – one of the IPO coordinato­rs – has put the company’s valuation between $1.6t. and $2.3t., two separate sources said. Credit Suisse’s research offers a similarly wide range in value, one of the fund managers said.

A major factor in the wide range is the various assumption­s analysts are making for the future direction of oil prices, said a source familiar with the deal.

The banks were not immediatel­y available for comment.

Sources have told Reuters that Aramco could offer 1%-2% of its shares, raising as much as $20 billion to $40b. A deal over $25b. would top the record-breaking IPO of Chinese e-commerce giant

Alibaba in 2014.

Aramco chairman Yasir al-Rumayyan said a decision on an internatio­nal listing would be made in the future, without giving a time-frame or venue.

Aramco did provide investors with some extra financial informatio­n on Sunday and Monday, including its detailed ninemonth earnings, which showed net income fell to $68.2b. by the end of September 30, down from $83.1b. a year earlier.

The company did not give any reason for the fall in earnings, but it likely reflects lower oil prices compared with 2018.

In 2016, when the oil price hit 13-year lows, Aramco’s net income was only $13b., according to a company bond prospectus this year, compared to $111b. in 2018.

Its net income for the third quarter of 2019 amounted to $21.1., according to Reuters calculatio­ns. By contrast, Exxon Mobil’s income for the same period was just over $3b.

Aramco said it did not expect the September 14 attacks, which targeted plants at the heart of Saudi Arabia’s oil industry and initially halved its production, would have a material impact on its business, operations and financial condition.

However the attacks underlined the potential political risk associated with the state company. Saudi Arabia blamed regional arch-rival Iran, a charge rejected by Tehran.

The analysts’ roadshow for Aramco, where analysts from banks working on the IPO speak to investors, began in the Middle East on Sunday and will run for a fortnight, a source familiar with the deal said, adding 26 to 27 analysts would be in different parts of the world at different times.

Roadshows involving senior management will begin after the analysts’ investor meetings the source said, adding pricing was likely to be announced around November 28.

Other roadshow locations are Japan, China and the usual suspects – London, New York, Boston, Hong Kong and Singapore – said another source close to the deal.

Legal & General Investment Management, one of Britain’s biggest asset managers, has not yet decided whether to invest in Aramco, its chief investment officer Sonja Laud told the Reuters Global Investment Outlook Summit on Monday. She added “concerns from a corporate governance viewpoint are wellflagge­d.”

The close relationsh­ip between the crown prince and new Aramco chairman Rumayyan, who also heads the kingdom’s sovereign wealth fund, was a governance concern for some investors, sources have previously said. (Reuters)

 ?? (Maxim Shemetov/Reuters) ?? AN ARAMCO OIL FACILITY in Abqaiq, Saudi Arabia. Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has said he wants a $2 trillion valuation.
(Maxim Shemetov/Reuters) AN ARAMCO OIL FACILITY in Abqaiq, Saudi Arabia. Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has said he wants a $2 trillion valuation.

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