The National - News

Kingdom plans to offer listings in education and health sectors

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Saudi Arabia, the biggest Arab economy, will offer internatio­nal investors opportunit­ies to buy stakes in four sectors between now and the end of the first quarter of next year as it continues to push its economic reform agenda and monetise some of its stateowned assets, the Saudi economy minister said.

Some of the assets, Mohammad Al Tuwaijri told the delegates at the Future Investment Initiative conference, are “more ready than others” and the order of the stateowned assets in the privatisat­ion pipeline depends on which sector they belong to.

“This would be the first tranche,” he said.

“Between now and the first quarter of 2019 we are going to introduce four opportunit­ies, [including] in silos and grains, which is under the Ministry of Environmen­t.

“We are also going to introduce some assets in education and schools. A couple of assets in health care, major institutio­ns and some of the services of the healthcare [sector], and also some desalinati­on plants,” Mr Al Tuwaijri said.

Saudi Arabia has embarked on a major economic overhaul of its economy in the wake of a three-year oil price slump which saw the crude prices falling from mid-2014 peak of $115 per barrel to less than $30 per barrel in the first quarter of 2016.

The crude benchmark has since clawed back, breaching $80 per barrel in recent weeks. The kingdom, however, is pushing ahead with Vision 2030 – a reform programme with privatisat­ion of state assets as one of its main pillars.

Public float of Saudi Aramco, the world’s top oil producing company, that according to some estimates could fetch up to $100 billion in proceeds, is at the heart of the government’s privatisat­ion drive.

Earlier this year Saudi Arabia delayed Aramco’s IPO, pending its planned merger with Sabic, the biggest petrochemi­cals producer in the Middle East. Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman, in an interview with Bloomberg said the Sabic acquisitio­n has had a knock-on effect on Aramco so the deal would happen in late 2020 or early 2021.

Mr Al Tuwaijri on Thursday said that the IPO will take place whenever the government decides to proceed with it.

He estimated last year that Riyadh’s de-nationalis­ation drive could raise about $200bn, in addition to any Aramco IPO proceeds. Asked to comment whether that figure is still achievable, the minister said it will depend on which assets are selected for privatisat­ion and whether or not assets from the Public Investment Fund are included. “The figure could vary but the market ultimately will decide.”

When asked about the slow pace of privatisat­ion efforts, Mr Al Tuwaijri said: “The scale of this programme is significan­t and it deserves to take all efforts to prepare the infrastruc­ture and prepare the ecosystem for the private sector to engage in this.”

Saudi Arabia has embarked on a major economic overhaul of its economy in the wake of a three-year oil price slump

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 ?? AFP ?? Chief executive of the Saudi Red Sea Developmen­t Company John Pagano speaks at the Future Investment Initiative in Riyadh
AFP Chief executive of the Saudi Red Sea Developmen­t Company John Pagano speaks at the Future Investment Initiative in Riyadh

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