Business Day

Aramco to pay out $75bn in spite of oil’s crash

Debt an option to cover dividend

- Verity Ratcliffe and Anthony DiPaola Dubai

Even with oil prices having slumped, Saudi Aramco said it still intends to give at least $75bn to shareholde­rs in 2020.

The world’s biggest company by market value, which listed in the Saudi Arabian capital of Riyadh in December, will pay the dividends on a quarterly basis, it said in its 2019 financial results released on Sunday.

Capital expenditur­e will drop to between $25bn and $30bn in 2020, from $32.8bn in 2019. Even so, the firm would still need at least $100bn to meet its dividend and capex commitment­s alone, almost matching its 2019 payments.

The spread of the coronaviru­s and the oil price war instigated by Saudi Arabia after Russia rejected co-ordinated production cuts has sent Brent crude prices spiralling. They have dropped more than 50% since the end of December to about $33 a barrel, and some analysts predict they will fall to below $10 a barrel.

Low oil prices will crimp Aramco’s earnings and hurt the finances of Saudi Arabia, which needs an oil price of $84 to balance this year’s budget.

Aramco will be able to achieve a free cash flow of $63bn in 2020, according to Riyadh-based Al Rajhi Capital. That calculatio­n assumes the company pumps 10.7-million barrels per day and Brent crude prices average $30 a barrel.

Raising debt is an option as borrowing costs are low and the company is still within its debtto-equity ratio range of 5%-15%.

The yield on Aramco’s $3bn bond due in 2029 has climbed this month amid a global selloff of emerging-market assets, but at 3.65% is barely higher than when the debt was issued in April.

The government could also cut its own dividend allocation­s while paying private shareholde­rs their portion of the $75bn. Private shareholde­rs own about 1.5% of the company.

“They don’t need to liquidate assets,” capital, restructur­e said Mazen or Al-Sudairi, borrow head of research at Al Rajhi. “They can do it easily from their cash flow, but it might affect the money transfer to the government for one or two quarters.”

Aramco’s profit slumped 21% in 2019 to 331-billion riyals because of lower oil prices and production. Drone and missile attacks on two of its biggest facilities in September temporaril­y slashed production by more than half.

Despite the fall, the energy producer is still the world’s biggest company by market value and the most profitable. Aramco’s 2019 income was equal to that of Apple, Samsung Electronic­s and Exxon Mobil combined.

 ?? /Reuters ?? A Saudi Aramco oil facility in Abqaiq, Saudi Arabia. Aramco’s Abqaiq facilities suffered a drone attack in 2019.
/Reuters A Saudi Aramco oil facility in Abqaiq, Saudi Arabia. Aramco’s Abqaiq facilities suffered a drone attack in 2019.

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