Kuwait Times

Saudi: 8% Aramco stake transferre­d to PIF portfolio

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Saudi Arabia on Thursday said it transferre­d an additional eight percent stake from oil giant Aramco to firms owned by the kingdom’s sovereign wealth fund, according to state media. This brings the state’s ownership to 82.186 percent of Aramco shares, according to the official Saudi Press Agency, with a cumulative 16 percent transferre­d to the kingdom’s Public Investment Fund (PIF) and its subsidiari­es.

Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the kingdom’s de facto ruler, announced “the completion of the transfer of 8 percent of Saudi Aramco’s total issued shares from the State’s ownership to” companies fully owned by the PIF, SPA said. The transfer is “a continuati­on of Saudi Arabia’s long-term initiative­s to boost and diversify the national economy and expand investment opportunit­ies,” SPA said.

Last year, four percent of Aramco’s shares, worth tens of billions of dollars, were transferre­d to Sanabil Investment­s, a firm controlled by the PIF, one of the world’s biggest sovereign wealth funds.

In 2022, another four percent of Aramco shares, estimated at the time to be worth $80 billion, were transferre­d directly to PIF. Aramco and its assets were once kept under strict government control, completely off-limits to outside investment. But under Prince Mohammed, the kingdom has slowly begun to cede some of that control. The oil giant sold 1.7 percent of its shares on the Saudi stock market in December 2019, generating $29.4 billion in the world’s biggest initial public offering.

The PIF has made high-profile investment­s in firms including Uber and Disney. Its so-called giga-projects—centerpiec­es of Prince Mohammed’s reform agenda—include Neom, a $500 billion futuristic megacity under constructi­on in the Saudi desert. The crown prince has said he wants the fund to have assets worth $1 trillion by the end of 2025. — AFP

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