The National - News

IPO OF SAUDI ARAMCO A STEP CLOSER AFTER LEGAL CHANGE

▶ Becomes joint stock company in key milestone before 5% stake sale

- MAHMOUD KASSEM

Saudi Aramco, the state-owned oil producer, transforme­d its legal structure into a jointstock company this month signalling its seriousnes­s to move ahead with its 5 per cent stake sale plan that may make it the world’s largest publicly traded company.

“This is one of the key steps they need to take to allow third party investors through the door and this is probably one of the most significan­t milestones when it comes to the actual IPO process,” said Oliver Shutzmann, chief executive of Iridium, a Dubai investor relations firm.

“This is one of the signals that they are probably on track to do this properly and from here onward they really have people’s attention.”

If the Saudi government sells a 5 per cent stake in Aramco valued at US$100 billion, it would give the company a valuation of $2 trillion, making it more than twice as valuable than Apple, currently the world’s largest publicly traded company at more than $900bn.

Transformi­ng Aramco into a joint stock company means that other investors can buy and sell shares of the company.

The next step for the company would be to issue a prospectus, detailing where the initial public offering will be listed as well as the financial details of the sale, investor relations profession­als and lawyers said.

The company is said to be considerin­g New York, London and Hong Kong for a dual listing as well as one on the Tadawul stock exchange in Saudi Arabia.

“They will have to choose the listing venue before doing the real detailed prospectus because each jurisdicti­on will have its own different requiremen­ts for disclosure but they are all relatively high,” said Andrew Tarbuck, partner at Hogan Lovells, an internatio­nal law firm.

“Due diligence would have been the start of the process, then converting the company into a joint stock company, it will then be drafting your prospectus and getting that approved by authoritie­s. Then you proceed to marketing.”

The Middle East and North Africa region recorded five IPOs in the third quarter of 2017, up from a single listing in the same period a year earlier with more offerings expected this year thanks to the recovery in oil prices, according to consultanc­y EY.

The value of IPOs in the third quarter rose 20 per cent to $236.7 million from a year earlier, led by three offerings on the Saudi Stock Exchange or Tadawul, according to EY.

Privatisat­ion lies at the heart of the economic overhaul of Saudi Arabia which still relies heavily on the sale of hydrocarbo­ns for revenues.

Riyadh is encouragin­g foreign investment­s in both government and private sector companies.

The stake sale of Aramco is part of a wider series of measures the Saudi Arabian government is taking to shore up public finances in the wake of the 2014 oil price crash. Plans also include reducing energy subsidies and implementa­tion of new taxes such as VAT.

Saudi Arabia stands to earn as much as 80bn Saudi riyals (Dh78.29bn) from non-oil revenues this year after the introducti­on of VAT, an expatriate worker tariff and the possible introducti­on of a levy on luxury goods, the investment lender Bank of America Merrill Lynch said last year.

Analysts said the stake sale of Aramco may encourage other government­s in the region to follow suit. Some, such as the gas station operator Adnoc Distributi­on in Abu Dhabi, have already sold shares to the public in recent months.

“There’s so much privatisat­ion work that could kick start the region’s markets because there are so many government businesses or part-owned by the government,” Mr Tarbuck said.

“It’s such a good opportunit­y to put these companies on the markets and boost the depth of the markets. I think the level of disclosure that is going to come out will encourage other government­s to use it as a kickstart for privatisin­g government related entities via public capital markets.”

Transformi­ng Aramco into a joint stock firm means that other investors can buy and sell shares in it

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