Arab Times

Canada plays up its natural resources expertise

TMX pitch is broader than just slice of Aramco IPO

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TORONTO, May 27, (RTRS): The Toronto Stock Exchange’s efforts to win a slice of the massive Saudi Aramco public listing plays up the country’s deep experience in natural resources as part of a broader offer to help the kingdom with its shift away from oil dependence.

In pitch documents obtained by Reuters, the TSX talks up “a customized regulatory environmen­t for resource issuers”, its leading position in oil and gas equity capital raising, and strong trading interest from outside the country.

The Canadian pitch is also broader than just for a slice of the Aramco IPO. On several trips to the kingdom, the most recent in late March, TMX executives have been joined by senior executives from some of the country’s biggest banks, brokerages and other financial players as Canada Inc seeks a role in delivering the kingdom’s broader Vision 2030 plan.

One source directly involved in the Canadian pitch told Reuters they are focused on convincing the Saudis that Canada excels in 10 of the 12 areas they have targeted for developmen­t under that plan, including in mining and infrastruc­ture. The source declined to be named due to the sensitivit­y of the matter.

“We feel that we have put TMX and Canada’s best foot forward and we continue to promote our strengths in pursuit of business opportunit­ies in the region and around the world,” TMX said in a statement.

But its best chance of winning a part of the biggest IPO ever, expected to raise about $100 billion as early as next year, may lie in its geography and geopolitic­s, securities lawyers say.

While the exchange, owned by the TMX Group Ltd, is widely considered an underdog in a race that has also excited larger exchanges in London, New York, Tokyo, Hong Kong and Singapore its case could be bolstered by a recent change in US law that allows those affected by the September 11, 2001 attacks to sue the Saudi government, they said.

“We are inoffensiv­e from a political perspectiv­e,” said Sarah Gingrich, a Calgary-based partner at Fasken Martineau, who has previously worked in Dubai with Saudi clients for internatio­nal law firm Freshfield­s.

That law, the Justice Against Sponsors of Terrorism Act, came into effect in September, after the US Congress overrode a veto by former President Barack Obama.

A group of insurers has since renewed a $6-billion lawsuit against the kingdom, seeking to hold it responsibl­e for business and property damage as a result of the attacks, in which Saudi has long denied involvemen­t.

In a March 17 interview with the Wall Street Journal, the Saudi energy minister, Khalid alFalih, said the so-called “terror law” is one considerat­ion in the country’s decision on whether to list in the United States.

Falih, who is Aramco’s chairman, declined to comment on the specifics of the IPO process at a recent news conference in Riyadh, citing legal restrictio­ns. However, he said the Saudi government still intended to list Aramco in 2018 and that the preparatio­ns were on track.

It was not clear if the issue was discussed during US President Donald Trump’s recent visit.

A spokeswoma­n for the NYSE, which sources have said planned to visit Saudi soon after Trump’s visit, declined to comment on their efforts to win Aramco’s business.

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