The Mercury News Weekend

Saudi Aramco IPO could set record

Oil giant could see a value of $1.7T after selling 3 billion shares

- By Kate Kelly and Carlos Tejada The New York Times

Saudi Arabia’s giant state-owned oil company, Saudi Aramco, on Thursday set the price of its initial public offering at a level that will raise $25.6 billion, a sum that is expected to make it the world’s biggest IPO, according to two people briefed on the pricing plan.

Saudi Aramco set the initial price at about $8.53 a share, the high end of the range it forecast last month, these people said. It plans to sell 3 billion shares, representi­ng 1.5% of the company. At that price, the company would be worth $1.7 trillion.

The amount to be raised by the sale exceeds the $25 billion raised by Alibaba, the Chinese online retail company, in its initial offering five years ago on the New York Stock Exchange.

The total proceeds could grow if additional shares are released for sale. The two people said these additional shares would bring the total raised closer to $30 billion.

The IPO establishe­s Aramco as one of the world’s most valuable companies, but the $1.7 trillion figure falls short of the Saudi royal family’s hopes of an offering that would value the company at close to $2 trillion.

Global investors proved to be skittish over the earlier valuations offered by the Saudi government. While its filings showed Aramco to be immensely profitable it posted a profit of $68 billion for the first nine months of the year its earnings have declined, and risks like global warming and geopolitic­al instabilit­y cast a pall over its prospects.

Aramco will sell its shares on the Riyadh stock market, the Tadawul. Trading is expected to begin Wednesday.

The IPO process has been an agonizingl­y slow since Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Saudi Arabia’s de facto ruler, first raised the idea making the crown jewel of the Saudi economy a public company more than two years ago.

After big early promises, the Saudis have taken a more cautious approach, restrictin­g the listing initially to Saudi Arabia in order to avoid the more rigorous disclosure­s that would be required in New York or London.

Despite Aramco’s big profits, oil companies are out of favor with some investors, who worry that concerns about the role of fossil fuels in climate change will eventually curb demand for Aramco’s large reserves of oil and gas.

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