The Borneo Post

Mobius expresses governance concerns over Saudi control of Aramco

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DUBAI: Mark Mobius has ‘governance’concerns over investing in shares or bonds that could be issued by Saudi Aramco in future because of Riyadh’s control over the oil giant, the emerging markets investor said.

“At the end of the day decisions about the company will not necessaril­y be for the benefit of the larger shareholde­rs but for the government,” Mobius told Reuters on the sidelines of an investment conference in Dubai.

Saudi Aramco is expected to issue its first internatio­nal bond over the next few months with the proceeds likely to be linked to the acquisitio­n of a controllin­g stake in petrochemi­cal maker SABIC.

Mobius said he would not invest in Aramco’s bonds unless the riskreward ratio is balanced by high interest rates, which would have to be higher than what Saudi Arabia offers.

“Because at the end of the day if there is a dissolutio­n in one way or another the Aramco bond would be the first to go, the first to be sacrificed ( before the sovereign)” he said.

Saudi Aramco pulled its planned US$ 100 billion initial public offering ( IPO) last year, partly because of concern on disclosure requiremen­ts, sources familiar with the decision said.

The planned IPO is at the heart of Saudi Arabia’s push to reform its economy and diversify its revenues from oil.

But Saudi energy minister Khalid al-Falih said in January a listing would happen by 2021.

Mobius, a pioneer of emerging market investing, left Franklin Templeton last year after more than 30 years and started his own London-based Mobius Capital Partners, which aims to buy direct equity stakes rather than exchange-traded funds.

But he said he would not invest in an Aramco IPO, which could become the largest ever, and would not consider buying its debt unless offered “very, very attractive” rates.

“If something happens where Saudi Arabia is in trouble for one reason or another and they need the money, they (Aramco) will need to transfer assets to the government,” Mobius said.

“You have a major governance issue,” he said, adding that the only way he would invest in Aramco would be if “the government picks up a minority shareholdi­ng and we have a truly independen­t board of directors.”

Saudi Arabia, together with other Gulf states, has been included in JP Morgan’s emerging-market government bond indexes, a move fund managers have estimated will generate US$ 30 billion to US$ 40 billion in inflows into Gulf debt by September this year.

Mobius said it was “smart” of Saudi Arabia to issue Aramco’s bonds now. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Shoppers from abroad fill their suitcase with Japanese cosmetics at a shopping district in Osaka, Japan. — Reuters photo
Shoppers from abroad fill their suitcase with Japanese cosmetics at a shopping district in Osaka, Japan. — Reuters photo

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