Kuwait Times

Gulf investors to help Aramco hit IPO target

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DUBAI/ABU DHABI: Saudi Arabia’s wealthy Gulf neighbors plan to invest in the initial public offering (IPO) of Saudi Aramco, sources familiar with the matter said, helping out Riyadh as it strives to raise $25.6 billion from a domestic listing of the state oil giant. Aramco has struggled to secure an anchor investor for the listing and found little interest beyond the Gulf, forcing Riyadh to scale back ambitions for the IPO, although it would still be the world’s biggest if it raises more than $25 billion.

Aramco officials have held talks on investing with Kuwait and Abu Dhabi, both oil producing states that have close ties to Saudi Arabia and both with big sovereign funds, after Riyadh scrapped plans for roadshows outside the Gulf. Abu Dhabi Investment Authority (ADIA) was considerin­g investing at least $1 billion, five sources told Reuters, while one of the sources said a final decision on the amount still required board approval.

Kuwait Investment Authority (KIA) also planned to invest in the IPO, two of the sources said, although the size of Kuwaiti commitment was not immediatel­y clear. ADIA and Aramco declined to comment. KIA did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment. Saudi Arabia aims to sell a 1.5 percent stake in Aramco, valuing the company at $1.6 trillion to $1.7 trillion, a lower valuation than the $2 trillion target initially sought by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, known as MBS, who has made the offering a cornerston­e of his economic diversific­ation program.

Jason Tuvey, senior emerging markets economist at Capital Economics, said that any Gulf state investment in the IPO would be “purely a political decision rather than anything (else)”. He said commitment­s by Abu Dhabi and

Kuwait, which both sit on huge oil reserves of their own, would be “to show their support to MBS and his plans to diversify the Saudi economy”. ADIA, estimated to have assets of nearly $700 billion, is chaired by the president of the United Arab Emirates and its deputy chairman is Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al-Nahyan, a close ally of the Saudi crown prince.

When Aramco’s IPO plans were first flagged in 2016, an internatio­nal listing was seen as one of the central elements, prompting interest among exchanges from New York to Singapore. But many foreign institutio­nal investors have said Aramco’s valuation looked expensive and raised concerns about political, governance and environmen­tal issues.

The head of the biggest refiner in Japan, a major Saudi oil importer, said Japanese firms were unlikely to invest because of difficulti­es in valuing the Saudi firm. Malaysian and Russian oil firms also said they would not invest. The sale process for listing Aramco on Riyadh’s Tadawul exchange kicked off on Nov 3. Lead manager Samba Capital said retail subscripti­ons reached 27.04 billion Saudi riyals ($7.21 billion) on Tuesday, ahead of today’s deadline. — Reuters

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