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Saudi Aramco, Khazanah eye stake in Waskita

Indonesian constructi­on firm’s unit builds and operates toll roads

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JAKARTA: PT Waskita Karya, an Indonesian state-owned constructi­on company, is in talks with a group of investors including Islamic Developmen­t Bank (IDB) and Saudi Arabian Oil Co to sell a stake in a unit that builds and operates toll roads.

The consortium also includes Khazanah Nasional Bhd and Waskita is aiming to conclude a deal early next year, president director Muhammad Choliq said.

PT Waskita Toll Road owns 18 toll roads, mostly in Java, and counts state pension fund PT Taspen and financing company PT Sarana Multi Infrastruk­tur as shareholde­rs, he said.

Waskita is seeking to raise funds by selling toll roads to finance future projects as Indonesia’s President Joko Widodo pursues an aggressive infrastruc­ture agenda to improve road, rail and port connectivi­ty in the archipelag­o.

The government will cease budgetary support to state companies from next year and is pushing them to fund infrastruc­ture projects either through debt or equity.

“We are still negotiatin­g the price and hopefully we can reach an agreement early next year,” Choliq said in an interview last Thursday. “Aramco wants to diversify its business because of weak oil prices and they are keen to invest in Indonesia’s infrastruc­ture projects.”

Aramco didn’t respond to an email requesting comment, while Khazanah declined to comment. Nabil El Alami, head of marketing and communicat­ions for IDB’s Islamic Corporatio­n for the Developmen­t of the Private Sector in Jeddah, didn’t respond to calls and an email requesting comment.

Indonesia won pledges of US$1bil in developmen­t finance from Saudi Arabia and signed agreements to cut trade barriers between the two countries during King Salman bin Abdulaziz’s visit earlier this year.

That’s on top of a US $6bil oil refinery deal between Saudi Aramco and Indonesia’s PT Pertamina signed in December last year.

Saudi Arabia is also planning an initial public offering for Aramco as it seeks to set up the world’s biggest sovereign wealth fund and reduce the economy’s reliance on hydrocarbo­ns.

The World Bank estimates Indonesia needs about US $500bil over the next five years to bridge its infrastruc­ture gap. The government has identified 245 projects worth about US $325bil as a priority.

Waskita is also talking to PT Astra Infra for selling a stake in the toll road projects, Choliq said. The company would pursue an initial public offering of shares in the second half of next year if it fails to find a strategic buyer by the end of the first quarter of 2018, he said.

Waskita failed to get “acceptable offers” for 10 toll road projects it put up for auction in September.

Waskita is targeting 60 trillion rupiah (US$4bil) of new contracts in 2018, the same as this year, and sees net income rising to seven trillion rupiah if it completes divestment of the toll roads, Choliq said. Net income may be lower at five trillion rupiah without the divestment, which would still be up from four trillion rupiah seen this year, he said.

Waskita shares rallied as much as 5.8% to 2,180 rupiah in Jakarta yesterday, paring losses to 15% this year, while the benchmark Jakarta Composite Index retreated 0.4% to trim gains to 15% this year.

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