Business Standard

Billionair­e Saudi family breaks the mould on kingdom’s secrecy

Bindawood family’s share sale to drive diversific­ation push

- MATTHEW MARTIN & DEVON PENDLETON 12 April

For Ahmad Bindawood, last year’s share offering in the eponymous Saudi grocery business was a chance to shape his legacy at the family firm he’s worked at since the age of eight, while cementing a $3.1 billion fortune built over the decades by his father and uncles.

As the October public offering of Bindawood Holding got underway, details emerged of some $76 million in previously undisclose­d loans made by the Saudi company to family members. In a departure from the traditiona­l secrecy associated with the kingdom’s family firms, Jeddah-based Bindawood revealed everything, put the IPO on hold and gave buyers the chance to take their money back. As the loans were quickly repaid, the sale resumed and eventually raised about $500 million for the family, attracting $29 billion in bids along the way. “We have to be very transparen­t with investors,” Bindawood said in an interview in Riyadh last month. “If there is any disclosure at any time that we need to make, we will go ahead and do it. So we took this on the shoulder and decided to announce it.”the success of the IPO has helped establish Bindawood, 37, as one of a new breed of Saudi executives rising within a corporate world that was largely off-limits to foreigners until a few years ago. What’s more, it has made him emblematic of a drive to shake up traditiona­l ways of doing business, dovetailin­g with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s goal of transformi­ng the oil-rich kingdom into a regional business hub.

That mould-breaking character can even be seen inside Bindawood stores. The past few months have seen the company doing prominent Valentine’s Day and Easter promotions, a move unthinkabl­e just a few years ago in a country that has historical­ly adhered to a strict Wahhabist interpreta­tion of Islam. Prince Mohammed’s commitment to reshaping the economy isn’t all working in Bindawood’s favour. A sudden decision to triple value added tax last year hit consumer spending. Higher customs duties and fees on expatriate­s are driving up costs for Saudi firms, too. And all at a time when the Covid-19 pandemic has been stoking unemployme­nt.

“We remain cautious of near-to-mid term growth across the consumers space as market size shrinks on potential expat depopulati­on,” said Mehwish Zafar, a senior equity analyst at Arqaam Capital in Dubai who has a “hold” recommenda­tion on the shares. Like-for-like sales growth will probably be negative until at least 2022, he said, with growth only coming from new store openings or acquisitio­ns.

Shares in Bindawood jumped more than 30 per cent in the days immediatel­y after the sale. They have since slipped back, showing as of Thursday a gain of about 11.5 per cent from the listing price.

It’s a performanc­e that has helped buttress the family’s bid to diversify into other assets while strengthen­ing the core business, a goal identified by Ahmad Bindawood as key to avoiding the kind of strife his father feared might undermine the business as it passed to a new generation. “The majority of family businesses don’t survive the transition to the third generation, and that’s something that concerned my father a lot,” Bindawood said. The rise of the Bindawood business has been some 40 years in the making. Once a small-time vendor of Arabian perfumes and groceries to pilgrims visiting the Islamic holy sites of Mecca and Medina, it is now a nationwide concern spanning supermarke­ts and hypermarke­ts, hotels and distributi­on centers. The grocery business alone employs more than 10,000 people across 74 stores.

Ahmad Bindawood’s own destiny was sealed as soon as his father, Abdulrazza­g Bindawood graduated in the 1980’s from the King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals in Riyadh. Instead of following his peers into the oil industry, he decided to join his brothers Ismail and Abdullah in their burgeoning retail trade.

Which is why Ahmad found himself on the front line at such a young age. At just eight, he was helping to sell items to the pilgrims during his school holidays, envious of friends who were away avoiding Saudi Arabia’s scorching summers. “Our friends were travelling and off enjoying themselves and sometimes we would ask: why not us?” Bindawood said. “But that experience built the passion in us to stay in the business that our father and our uncles built.” A decision to push into online shopping and delivery helped prepare the firm for lockdowns during the pandemic, but couldn’t outweigh the hit from the absence of religious tourists who were prevented from entering the kingdom for much of the year. While profit climbed almost 7 per cent last year, it had slumped more than 53 per cent in the fourth quarter as Saudi Arabia reimposed travel restrictio­ns. Bindawood is still optimistic that shoppers will return as travel resumes, though how quickly pilgrims come back to Saudi Arabia in anything like their previous numbers remains uncertain.

 ??  ?? Ahmad Bindawood, CEO of Bindawood Holding Co
Ahmad Bindawood, CEO of Bindawood Holding Co
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