The Citizen (KZN)

Saudi selloff slows to snails pace

- Dubai

– Saudi Arabia’s $300 billion (about R4.1 trillion) privatisat­ion programme was billed as the sale of the century when Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman unveiled his plan to great fanfare.

Nineteen months later, it is moving at a snail’s pace, bankers, investors and analysts familiar with the process say.

The main problems they cite are heavy bureaucrac­y, an inadequate legal framework, frequent changes of priority in government department­s and fatigue among investors.

Some also blame a waitand-see approach among many investors due to uncertaint­y about the fallout from an anti-corruption campaign in which dozens of royal family members, ministers and senior officials were rounded up in early November.

The centrepiec­e listing of state oil company Saudi Aramco – expected alone to raise up to $100 billion – is on track to go ahead next year, Prince Mohammed said in October. However, Riyadh has yet to select any exchange abroad that will handle – along with the Saudi market – what would be the biggest share flotation in history.

Sectors where the privatisat­ion process has been slow include grains, the postal service and healthcare.

“It’s going to take longer [than many expected],” said a Saudi banker who has worked on transactio­ns. “There are headwinds from the shifting of priorities in government and at a micro-level as these are old institutio­ns that have often never kept books and are not up to the rigours of privatisat­ion.”

The sell-off is a cornerston­e of Prince Mohammed’s Vision 2030 plan to bring in fresh revenue and diversify the economy – which is in recession and blighted by high unemployme­nt – away from energy exports in an era of low oil prices.

But the bankers, investors and analysts are expressing concerns, including over the lack of a regulatory framework to assure wouldbe shareholde­rs about how much control foreign companies could gain as a result of the stake sales, including the right to lay off staff.

Vice Minister for Economy and Planning Mohammed al-Tuwaijri said in April that, excluding Aramco, the government aimed to make $200 billion by putting large parts of the Saudi economy in private hands.

The selloff, including 5% of Aramco, is intended to improve state finances. The government posted a $79 billion deficit last year. –

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa