The National - News

Al Ansari shares surge 19% on Dubai market debut

- MASSOUD A DERHALLY

Shares of Al Ansari Financial Services, the UAE money exchange and transfer company, surged more than 19 per cent at the start of trading on Thursday, as it made its debut on the Dubai Financial Market.

Shares of the company – which started trading on the DFM under the ticker symbol “ALANSARI” – rose to Dh1.23 at the start of trading. They closed 16.51 per cent higher at Dh1.20.

Al Ansari sold 750 million shares and set the final share price at Dh1.03, the higher end of its Dh1-Dh1.03 offer range, implying a market capitalisa­tion of Dh7.73 billion ($2.1 billion) at listing.

It drew $3.45 billion in bids for its initial public offering that raised $210 million from the sale of a 10 per cent stake, with the offering oversubscr­ibed 22 times on average.

The listing “will set us on a new and exciting chapter in our 57-year history”, said Mohammad Al Ansari, chairman of Al Ansari.

“The success of this transactio­n will further support the UAE’s ambitions of deepening and diversifyi­ng its capital markets by inspiring other family-owned businesses to follow in our footsteps.”

National Bonds Corporatio­n – owned by the Investment Corporatio­n of Dubai, the investment arm of the Dubai government – committed to a cornerston­e investment worth Dh200 million in the IPO.

Al Ansari’s listing “supports our diversific­ation strategy and Dubai’s commitment to developing its capital markets”, said Helal Al Marri, chairman of the DFM.

“Most importantl­y, it sets an encouragin­g precedent for other family businesses to follow suit and help boost economic growth and investor confidence in the UAE.”

Al Ansari expects to distribute a minimum dividend of Dh600 million for the 2023 financial year, implying a minimum dividend yield of 7.77 per cent to 8 per cent.

A first-half dividend payment will be made in October and the second-half payment in April 2024.

The IPO drive in the Middle East has continued to gather pace this year, after the region registered 48 listings in 2022 that raised more than $23 billion last year. That compared with $7.52 billion from 20 offerings in 2021.

The 2022 figure was the highest share for the Gulf region after 2019, when Saudi Aramco went public in a $29 billion offering, the world’s largest.

Last month, Adnoc raised about $2.5 billion from the sale of a 5 per cent stake in its gas business, marking the year’s largest listing so far globally.

The Adnoc Gas listing was about 50 times oversubscr­ibed and drew more than $124 billion in orders. Al Ansari Exchange was set up about 60 years ago and has 231 branches in the UAE, offering exchange services, remittance­s, a system to pay domestic workers and savings plans.

It opened its first exchange branch in the UAE in 1966 and also operates in Kuwait.

Al Ansari’s IPO is part of a strategy to reposition the company for its next phase of growth, with proceeds from the offering going to parent entity Al Ansari Holding.

The UAE is the second-largest outward personal remittance­s market globally, with a total value of $48 billion, Al Ansari said last month, citing a report by Edgar, Dunn and Company.

Al Ansari registered 22 million personal remittance transactio­ns last year, with the money remitted increasing by 4.8 per cent to Dh737 million, compared with 2021.

The company’s net profit grew by 21 per cent to Dh595 million in 2022.

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