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Saudi Aramco refiner hires banks for IPO

Luberef in Us$1bil share sale exercise

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Saudi Aramco Base Oil Co, a refining unit of the state-owned oil producer, named banks including Citigroup and HSBC Holdings Plc for its initial public offering (IPO) on the Saudi stock exchange, which could raise about Us$1bil (Rm4.48bil).

The company, also known as Luberef, is planning to sell 50 million shares, or a nearly 30% stake, according to a statement.

The price at which all subscriber­s in the offering will purchase the shares will be determined after the book-building period.

The company hired SNB Capital as lead manager, financial adviser, book-runner, global coordinato­r and underwrite­r.

It also named Citigroup Saudi Arabia, HSBC Saudi Arabia, and Morgan Stanley Saudi Arabia as financial advisers, book-runners, global coordinato­rs and underwrite­rs.

The bidding period for participat­ing parties and book-building process opens on Dec 4 for six days, according to the company’s prospectus.

Subscripti­on period for individual investors opens Dec 14 for two days, and the announceme­nt of the final allocation of the offer shares will be no later than Dec 22.

Saudi Arabia’s Capital Market Authority approved Luberef’s IPO plan last week.

The refinery business, with operations in Saudi industrial cities Jeddah and Yanbu, is 70% owned by Saudi Aramco, while the rest is held by local private equity firm Jadwa Investment.

The offering consists of Jadwa’s sale of its shares in Luberef, while Saudi Aramco is

“The demand outlook for base oils is further supported by strong macro fundamenta­ls in Saudi Arabia and the broader Middle East region, which are key end-markets for Luberef.” Tareq Alnuaim

keeping it’s stake.

The energy-rich Persian Gulf has been one of the world’s IPO hotspots this year, accounting for almost half the proceeds from new share listings across Europe, the Middle East and Africa.

While share sales elsewhere have dried up amid aggressive interest rate rises, Middle Eastern markers have benefited from high oil prices, and Saudi Arabia alone has seen a record 27 IPOS this year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Jadwa had acquired its Luberef holding in 2007 from Exxon Mobil Corp.

Exxon had originally invested in the refinery in 1978.

Luberef operates two production facilities in Yanbu and Jeddah on Saudi Arabia’s west coast.

It produces various base oils and byproducts including asphalt, marine heavy fuel oil and naphtha.

They are mainly sold across the Middle East, North Africa and India. It also sells across Asia, the Americas and Europe.

Demand for base oils globally is expected to grow by about five million tonnes between 2022 and 2030, according to a company statement.

“The demand outlook for base oils is further supported by strong macro fundamenta­ls in Saudi Arabia and the broader Middle East region, which are key end-markets for Luberef.”

“Luberef will continue focusing on achieving growth in key end-markets, especially where market dynamics present attractive demand outlooks,” Tareq Alnuaim, president and chief executive officer of Luberef, said the statement.

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