The Borneo Post

Saudi Aramco buying US$69 billion stake in chemicals giant SABIC

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RIYADH: Saudi state oil giant Aramco said it is buying a majority stake in petrochemi­cals behemoth SABIC for US$ 69.1 billion, a deal that gives the crown prince’s ambitious reform programme a massive cash boost.

The 70-per cent stake purchase effectivel­y merges the kingdom’s two largest companies, handing its top sovereign wealth fund around the same amount it had expected from a much- delayed Aramco IPO.

The deal, mooted last year, lends Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman greater fiscal flexibilit­y to pursue his reforms agenda after journalist Jamal Khashoggi’s murder and a sweeping crackdown against dissent left many investors spooked.

“SaudiAramc­otodayanno­unced the signing of a share purchase agreement to acquire a 70 pct majority stake in Saudi Basic Industries Corporatio­n ( SABIC) from the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia, in a private transactio­n for... US$ 69.1 billion,” Aramco said in a statement.

Hailing it as a ‘ historic deal’, Saudi Energy Minister Khalid al-Falih said the biggest winner from the deal was the national economy.

Saudi Arabia had sought to raise billions of dollars through a historic Aramco public offer to diversify the economy of the world’s largest oil exporter, but the plan has suffered a series of delays.

Observers see the acquisitio­n of a controllin­g stake in SABIC as a complex alternativ­e to raise much-needed cash for the Public Investment Fund ( PIF).

“This is a win-winwin transactio­n and a transforma­tional deal for three of Saudi Arabia’s most important economic entities,” PIF managing director Yasir al-Rumayyan said in the Aramco statement.

“It will unlock significan­t capital for PIF’s continued long-term investment strategy, underpinni­ng sectoral and revenue diversific­ation for Saudi Arabia.”

SABIC, Saudi Arabia’s largest publicly listed non- oil company, is said to have a market capitalisa­tion of around US$ 100 billion – the same amount the kingdom had sought to raise from Aramco’s IPO.

“Aramco is the Saudi entity best positioned to receive favourable financing, so this deal is the most efficient way for the PIF to obtain an influx of cash,” Ellen Wald, author of the book Saudi Inc, told AFP.

“It is an alternativ­e to the Aramco IPO in the short-term because it gives the PIF some of the cash it was looking for, though we may still see a publicly traded Aramco in the future.”

The plan to float around five per cent of Aramco – expected to be the world’s largest stock sale – forms the cornerston­e of a reform programme envisaged by Prince Mohammed to wean the economy off its reliance on oil.

But Aramco executives have repeatedly cited unfavourab­le market conditions to push back the IPO, initially planned for 2018.

Government officials, however, insist that they remain committed to the IPO despite regulatory hurdles and that it will go ahead by 2021.

The PIF seeks cash to finance an ambitious reform programme envisaged by the crown prince.

Aiming to control more than US$ 2 trillion by 2030, the PIF is involved in a host of big-ticket global investment­s – from buying a stake in Uber to pumping cash into a planned US$ 500 billion mega city called NEOM in the kingdom’s northwest. — AFP

 ??  ?? The headquarte­rs of Saudi Basic Industries Corp (SABIC) is seen in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Observers see the acquisitio­n of a controllin­g stake in SABIC as a complex alternativ­e to raise much-needed cash for the Public Investment Fund (PIF). — Reuters photo
The headquarte­rs of Saudi Basic Industries Corp (SABIC) is seen in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Observers see the acquisitio­n of a controllin­g stake in SABIC as a complex alternativ­e to raise much-needed cash for the Public Investment Fund (PIF). — Reuters photo

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