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Adnoc unveils plan for service station IPO and oil trading unit

▶ Minority stake in service stations operator to be sold to investors with trading possible by next month

- MUSTAFA ALRAWI AND JENNIFER GNANA

The Abu Dhabi National Oil Company plans to list a minority stake in its service stations operator on the Abu Dhabi stock market next month.

It will also set up an oil trading unit as it follows its new strategy to more actively manage its portfolio of assets to unlock value, create and grow revenue streams, and foster entreprene­urship within the organisati­on as well as in the broader economy.

At least 10 per cent of Adnoc Distributi­on, which operates 360 service stations and 235 Oasis convenienc­e outlets throughout the Emirates, will be sold to investors in the UAE and internatio­nally.

The listing is still pending final approval as well as the approvals of regulators the Securities and Commoditie­s Authority and the Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange. Ultimately, the transactio­n would also be dependent on market conditions but it is understood that shares could start trading by mid-December.

“We also plan to introduce non-speculativ­e asset backed trading to further stretch the dollar from every barrel we produce,” Dr Sultan Al Jaber, the company’s chief executive, said yesterday.

The Abu Dhabi National Oil Company plans to list a minority stake in its service stations operator on the Abu Dhabi stock market next month.

At least 10 per cent of Adnoc Distributi­on, which operates 360 service stations and 235 Oasis convenienc­e stores throughout the UAE, will be sold to investors in the UAE and internatio­nally.

The listing is still pending final approval as well as the approvals of regulators the Securities and Commoditie­s Authority and the Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange (ADX). Ultimately, the transactio­n would also be dependent on market conditions but it is understood that shares could start trading by mid-December. The offer period will open on November 26, according to local market sources, giving plenty of time for investors who had been seeking an allocation in the Emaar Developmen­t listing on the DFM this month, to free up capital for the Adnoc Distributi­on IPO.

Adnoc will take all the proceeds from the IPO – the first in the group’s history – and remain the majority shareholde­r. Institutio­ns will include the strategic federal investor the Emirates Investment Authority, which will have a 5 per cent overall allocation reserved for it, and there will also be a tranche set aside for domestic retail buyers. Pricing will be via a bookbuildi­ng process.

Adnoc’s new corporate strategy includes the considerat­ion of the public flotation of shares in select service business units as part of a broader plan to more actively manage its portfolio of assets and form new partnershi­ps. That is expected to unlock value, create and grow revenue streams.

Dr Sultan Al Jaber, Adnoc’s chief executive, described the IPO as “an important milestone” in the group’s new approach and a “unique opportunit­y for investors to take advantage of the UAE’s attractive and dynamic investment environmen­t”.

The Adnoc Distributi­on chief executive Saeed Al Rashdi said that the company plans to become “one of the region’s leading consumer retailers and fuel wholesaler­s”.

Adnoc Distributi­on’s business model has been boosted by the reform of fuel subsidies in 2015 that allow for stable margins.

It has a 67 per cent overall market share and a monopoly in Abu Dhabi and Sharjah. It also has a strong commercial and industrial fuel distributi­on business including in aviation, government and other strategic sectors.

The “revitalisa­tion” of its retail network is regarded as an important growth area for the future, according to Mr Al Rashdi. Its 235 stores makes its retail network the largest in the country and the company is seeking a valuation based on what a similar-sized retail group might achieve rather than that for an equivalent scale oil and gas distributi­on business which would be lower according to European multiples, local market sources said.

The company, which had earnings before interest, tax, depreciati­on and amortizati­on of Dh2.1 billion last year, will follow a “consistent and progressiv­e dividend policy”, with shareholde­rs set to receive at least US$400 million in the 2018 calendar year.

Management has also been beefed up ahead of the IPO, with deputy chief executive John Carey joining from BP and Enoc’s Petri Pentti becoming chief financial officer.

Selling shares to the public is also aimed at nurturing Abu Dhabi’s capital markets.

Abu Dhabi so far has taken only small steps towards fostering a retail share-owning culture, and selling shares in the ubiquitous Adnoc service stations is considered a potential way to generate the kind of enthusiasm witnessed in, for example, the UK privatisat­ions of the 1980s of businesses like British Telecom that were copied throughout the world.

Rothschild is the financial adviser on the IPO with Merrill Lynch, Citigroup, First Abu Dhabi Bank and HSBC as joint global co-ordinators. EFG Hermes, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley are joint bookrunner­s.

The listing is still pending the approvals of regulators the Securities and Commoditie­s Authority and the ADX

 ?? Adnoc ?? Adnoc Distributi­on operates 360 service stations and 235 Oasis convenienc­e stores in the UAE
Adnoc Adnoc Distributi­on operates 360 service stations and 235 Oasis convenienc­e stores in the UAE

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