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Saudi says Aramco IPO on track as it redrafts plan

Ministry assures privatisat­ion programme ‘continues to gain traction’

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RIYADH: Plans to sell a stake in Saudi Arabian Oil Co (Aramco) are “well underway,” the government said, as the kingdom redrafts one of its key economic blueprints to eliminate overlap with other reform programmes.

The government’s privatisat­ion programme “continues to gain traction,” the Ministry of Culture and Informatio­n said in a statement.

Officials have said the kingdom planned to sell as much as 5% of Aramco next year in what could be the world’s biggest initial public offering (IPO).

“The IPO process is well underway and Saudi Aramco remains focused on ensuring that all IPO-related requiremen­ts are completed on time and to the very highest standards,” it said.

The statement comes after an official document seen by Bloomberg News showed that authoritie­s are redrafting the National Transforma­tion Programme (NTP), a plan to overhaul the kingdom’s government and economy as it grapples with low oil prices.

The revamp won’t change key fiscal or energy-related targets, according to the document, but it’s needed to match it with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s broader Saudi Vision 2030, which includes a separate programme for the Aramco IPO.

The NTP’s revision “represents learning and progress, and provides a stronger foundation for the necessary reforms and progress for the country,” the ministry said.

It said more than half the objectives under the previous version had been assigned to different entities or programmes.

The original NTP was designed to overhaul the Saudi bureaucrac­y, and set targets for each ministry to achieve by 2020.

The plan, however, was overshadow­ed by the prince’s Vision 2030, a broader blueprint for life after oil that calls for selling shares in Saudi Aramco and creating the world’s largest sovereign wealth fund.

Consultant­s and civil servants began redrafting the NTP in July, calling the effort “NTP 2.0.” The document outlines a 16-week schedule to develop the programme. A final report is due to be delivered to the government by the end of October.

“It is important to adjust and adapt to unexpected situations, and to use new circumstan­ces in ways that reinforce and strengthen underlying strategic objectives,” the ministry said in its statement. “Such flexibilit­y should not undermine the stability and predictabi­lity needed to allow private sector to plan its new investment­s and expansions.”

The statement cited several “early successes” for the kingdom’s programme, such as “a faster than anticipate­d reduction in the budget deficit, energy price reform” and the introducti­on of an excise tax on soda and tobacco products.

The government has also allocated 200 billion riyals “of support to strategic private sector organisati­ons,” including 15 billion riyals (US$4bil) to fund industrial projects and 75 billion riyals for a proposed Saudi-China fund, which would focus on infrastruc­ture and logistics projects, the ministry said in the statement.

 ?? — Bloomberg ?? Listing plan: The Aramco logo is seen at the World Petroleum Congress in Istanbul, Turkey. Saudi officials have said the kingdom plans to sell as much as 5% of Aramco next year in what could be the world’s biggest IPO.
— Bloomberg Listing plan: The Aramco logo is seen at the World Petroleum Congress in Istanbul, Turkey. Saudi officials have said the kingdom plans to sell as much as 5% of Aramco next year in what could be the world’s biggest IPO.

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