The National - News

Region’s IPO resurgence welcome

▶ Companies look to expand and family businesses to evolve

-

The global financial crisis slammed the brakes on companies going public globally and regionally. In the UAE, there was hope that a rebound was underway as the Dubai economy began to show signs of a recovery in 2013.

The listing of two companies in the UAE in 2014 drew tremendous interest from investors, who had shunned equities after the meltdown in the United States and its reverberat­ions globally and in the region, with offerings being oversubscr­ibed at the time between 36 and 65 times.

That uptick in interest was unfortunat­ely short-lived and a 2015 market correction in China, the world’s second largest economy, wiped out US$5 billion from its equity market, sending shock waves globally.

Despite the sluggish characteri­sation of the investment climate, there are encouragin­g signs globally and regionally that investors have warmed up to a resurgence of IPOs.

Over the past two quarters and in recent weeks, the US has seen a flurry of listings, the most in the country in two years. After Snap’s offering, Altice USA, a cable company, raised $1.9bn in the second-biggest US IPO of the year. Though shares of other companies that have listed have

There are encouragin­g signs globally and regionally that investors have warmed up to a resurgence of IPO

subsequent­ly traded below their IPO price, generally the market appears healthy.

According to Renaissanc­e Capital, a consultanc­y that focuses on public offerings, the US recorded 54 IPOs in the second quarter of the year raising $11bn, a two-year record high.

Though Arab markets yearto-date are mixed in performanc­e, oil is hovering in the mid $40s a barrel, about 15 per cent down year-to-date, there is nonetheles­s room for optimism.

The emergence of parallel market Nomu has been a boon to small caps in Saudi Arabia with a handful of companies listing. As Dania Saadi reports, the Dubai Financial Market anticipate­s at least two public offerings by the end of 2018, according to the exchange.

As companies look to expand and family businesses look to evolve, tapping markets for liquidity is increasing­ly becoming attractive even though investor appetite may still be uncertain. The 5 per cent listing of Saudi Arabia’s Aramco in 2018, which is expected to raise more than $100bn has put the region back on the map of institutio­nal and private investors.

That behemoth may very well prove to be the bellwether investors are waiting for.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates