Arab News

Saudi Arabia aims to regulate free float trading

- Nour El-Shaeri Riyadh

Saudi Arabia’s regulatory framework is progressin­g, with the Capital Market Authority initiating a new public consultati­on allowing stockholde­rs to offer more shares.

During a panel at the Saudi Capital Market Forum in Riyadh, Deputy of Financing and Investment Abdullah Binghannam revealed that the Kingdom has commenced its public consultati­on for the so-called “FMO” framework, aiming to enhance the market’s liquidity and accessibil­ity. “We recently published the public consultati­on for the FMO framework, which enables large shareholde­rs to float additional shares in a process that is governed, which is a catalyst for an increase in free float,” he explained.

“We had stc two years ago, and since we had this practice in the market, we should regulate it because we are following a concept of trying to enable by regulation­s,” Binghannam added.

Free float refers to the number of company shares available for trading by the public, excluding locked-in claims held by company insiders, government­s, or other restricted parties that are not readily available for trading on the stock market.

Binghannam elaborated on the authority’s efforts to collaborat­e with companies and shareholde­rs to highlight the advantages of expanding the market’s free float. He added that the authority is dedicated to enhancing the appeal of Saudi Arabia’s capital market to a broader spectrum of investors, particular­ly internatio­nal ones, by employing dual strategies.

“Firstly, easing the access over the years. Second, keeping our government regulation­s up to standards. This resulted in bringing the total internatio­nal investors holding in the Saudi capital market to SR400 billion

($106 billion),” Binghannam stated. “Last year, the demand for subscripti­on in IPOs (initial public offering) from internatio­nal investors was an excess of SR70 billion, which is more than the offerings themselves,” he added.

Joining Binghannam’s

panel session, Claire Suddens-Speirs, partner and co-head of Global Equity Capital Markets at Rothschild & Co., commended Saudi Arabia’s proactive and globally acknowledg­ed initiative­s in the capital market sector.

“The world is watching and paying attention, and more importantl­y, the world is participat­ing in what we are seeing now as real sustained growth in terms of the market in the region,” she said. “There is a real excitement in terms of what is now happening in the Middle East, but specifical­ly in the Saudi market, there is a lot of developmen­t that is happening and that has already happened,” she added.

 ?? Photo
AN ?? Capital Market Authority’s Deputy of Financing and Investment Abdullah Binghannam.
Photo AN Capital Market Authority’s Deputy of Financing and Investment Abdullah Binghannam.

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