Arab Times

Trump backs New York in bourses’ battle for Aramco listing

JASTA law remains a worry for Saudis

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WASHINGTON/KHOBAR, Saudi Arabia, Nov 5, (RTRS): US President Donald Trump publicly appealed on Saturday for Saudi Arabia to list national oil company Saudi Aramco’s shares in New York, intervenin­g in a battle among the world’s top stock exchanges.

“Would very much appreciate Saudi Arabia doing their IPO of Aramco with the New York Stock Exchange,” Trump wrote on Twitter. “Important to the United States!”

Trump did not say why he raised the issue at this time or whether he was responding to any informatio­n about the NYSE’s bid. But by describing the listing as a priority for Washington, he could help sway the Saudis’ decision.

The Saudi government, seeking to raise money as low oil prices strain its finances, plans to sell about 5 percent of Aramco next year in a sale officials say could raise about $100 billion, making it the world’s largest initial public offer ever.

Saudi authoritie­s have said they intend to list Aramco in Riyadh and on one or more foreign exchanges, setting off a competitio­n among New York, London, Hong Kong, Tokyo and other bourses. An Aramco spokesman had no comment on Trump’s tweet, while a spokeswoma­n for the NYSE declined to comment.

NYSE Group president Thomas Farley said at a conference in Riyadh last week that he had not given up on the IPO and was in talks with Saudi authoritie­s.

The London Stock Exchange has also received some government support for its bid, although that has been less public. Prime Minister Theresa May and the chief of the LSE pitched investment­s in Britain to the head of Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund on a visit to Riyadh earlier this year.

While Trump’s tweet named the New York Stock Exchange, it did not mention rival Nasdaq Inc, which is also vying for the Aramco listing.

“Generally, public servants should be impartial, not give preferenti­al treatment to anyone, and avoid endorsemen­ts,” said Scott Amey, general counsel for the government ethics watchdog Project on Government Oversight in Washington. “We have already seen violations in this administra­tion, and it doesn’t help that the president isn’t leading by example.”

Nasdaq replied to Trump in a tweet, saying it agreed the United States was the “best destinatio­n for global companies” but that Aramco belongs on Nasdaq “with the 5 most valuable operating companies in the world.”

Nearly two years after announcing their plan to sell Aramco shares, Saudi officials say they have not yet decided on foreign listing venues.

Sources told Reuters in August that Riyadh favored New York for Aramco’s main foreign listing. But some financial and legal advisers have recommende­d London as a less problemati­c and risky option. Aramco’s lawyers warned about litigation risks associated with the US Justice Against Sponsors of Terrorism Act, or JASTA. Passed last year, the law allows the Saudi government to be sued on the grounds that it helped to plan the Sept 11, 2001, attacks on the United States, an allegation which Riyadh denies.

Mohammed al-Sabban, who has been an adviser to former Saudi oil minister Ali al-Naimi, told Reuters that Trump’s interventi­on would not resolve the JASTA problem.

“President Trump has forgotten completely that the risks of implementi­ng the JASTA law against Saudi assets are still there,” Sabban said.

“Probably during his administra­tion he could prevent any case against Saudi Arabia. However, when President Trump’s term ends, this will raise fears that the JASTA law could still be applied.” A round-table discussion during the 10th meeting of Joint Committee For Economic, Industrial and Technical Cooperatio­n between Kuwait and Turkey in

Kuwait City.

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