San Francisco Chronicle

Now Saudi Arabia’s Aramco is worth $2 trillion

- By Stanley Reed Stanley Reed is a New York Times writer.

Saudi Aramco, the world’s biggest oil company, ended trading Monday with a market value of over $2 trillion, a worth that had eluded it when it took its shares public.

Shares in the company closed at about $10.13, giving the company a valuation of $2.03 trillion on the Saudi exchange.

The company made its market debut Wednesday at a value of $1.88 trillion. Resistance from global investors and Western advisers forced the company’s leadership to settle for a valuation below the target of $2 trillion set by the kingdom’s chief policymake­r, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. But in four trading days, strong demand, mostly from Saudi retail and corporate investors, pushed the shares above the prince’s goal.

Aramco, whose roots date to the discovery of oil in Saudi Arabia in the 1930s by U.S. prospector­s, is a rare case of an oldline company that tops technology giants in market value. With a near monopoly on production in the world’s leading oilexporti­ng nation, Aramco is worth far more than Apple or Microsoft, each valued at about $1.2 trillion. It also far outstrips the combined worth of five of the largest Western oil companies, Exxon Mobil, Chevron, Total, BP and Royal Dutch Shell.

Analysts attribute Aramco’s high valuation in part to its unmatched profitabil­ity. The company reported $68 billion in net income for the first nine months of 2019. Aramco marries very low costs — largely attributab­le to its matchless oil fields — to far higher output than any other oil company, resulting in a cashspewin­g machine.

In these early days, analysts say, the company may also be benefiting from a different trading environmen­t than experience­d by its publicly listed Western rivals. The Saudi exchange is relatively small, and only around 1.5% of Aramco shares are being traded. With the government and Saudi banks doing whatever they can to encourage and prod investors to buy and hold on to the shares, there is little surprise, analysts say, that their price has been rising.

Local brokers say Saudi investors believe that the national oil company has a bright future, whereas their counterpar­ts in the United States and Europe are becoming increasing­ly skeptical about the prospects of fossilfuel companies as concerns about climate change grow.

Even with the $2 trillion mark reached, the prince has not achieved all that he set out to do. For instance, he has fallen short of his goal to bring in internatio­nal investor funds for schemes like his giant real estate projects and other efforts to diversify the economy away from oil.

“The victory has been somewhat Pyrrhic, with Saudi rather than overseas institutio­nal investors participat­ing in the initial IPO,” analysts from Bernstein, a market research firm, wrote in a note to clients Thursday.

Analysts say the shares may remain at what some consider elevated levels for some time. Saudi retail investors, for instance, are being offered a bonus share for every 10 shares they buy and hold for six months up to a ceiling of 100 shares — an incentive not to sell. And the government is determined that the IPO be scored a success and that the millions of Saudis who invested do not have cause for regret.

There are signs that traders are using the government’s support of Saudi Aramco’s stock to make almost riskfree bets. For instance, Boubyan Petrochemi­cal, a Kuwaiti company, revealed in a Kuwaiti stock market disclosure Thursday that it had sold about 3.3 million shares of Saudi Aramco stock, reaping about $5.3 million in profit.

These shortterm effects may eventually wear off, although the Saudi government will be reluctant to see local investors burned after they bought into the crown prince’s prize project.

“Aramco could trade in a league of its own for some time, but the stock market is a weighing machine in the long term and the laws of economic gravity will eventually apply,” the Bernstein analysts wrote.

 ?? Amr Nabil / Associated Press ?? A trader talks to others in front of a screen displaying Saudi stock market values at the Arab National Bank in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, last Thursday. The company has topped the $2 trillion mark.
Amr Nabil / Associated Press A trader talks to others in front of a screen displaying Saudi stock market values at the Arab National Bank in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, last Thursday. The company has topped the $2 trillion mark.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States