GulfBase Live Support
29/10/2017 21:55 AST
The financiers and corporate chieftains gathered for Saudi Arabia's 'Davos in the Desert' heard the same message again and again. From the crown prince down, Saudi leaders wanted no room for doubt: the initial public offering of oil giant Aramco is "on track" for 2018.
But beneath the disciplined message put forward in Riyadh lies a more uncertain reality. The 2018 deadline looks tight and the final shape of the deal -- exactly where it happens, how big it is and who gets to take part -- is no clearer than it was a week ago.
There's a lot at stake in Saudi Arabia and beyond. Potentially the biggest equity sale in history, the IPO is the centerpiece of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman's ambitious reform program and intended to seed a $2 trillion sovereign wealth fund to carry the Middle East's biggest economy through the end of the oil age. It will also mean a giant pay day for Aramco's Wall Street advisers including JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Morgan Stanley.
Since Prince Mohammed surprised everyone in early 2016 with his promise to partially privatize the country's most valuable asset, Saudi officials have said the IPO would take place next year and involve both a domestic and an international listing, most likely in London or New York.
As recently as this month, Khalid Al Falih, the country's energy minister and a close confidant of the prince, supported the official line: the IPO will happen in 2018, both on the Tadawul, Riyadh's local exchange, and overseas.
Yet on Thursday, Mohammed Al-Jadaan, the country's finance minister, became the first senior official to openly discuss the possibility of forgoing the international part of the IPO -- its most important element.
"We have said publicly that Tadawul is for certain," Al-Jadaan told the Financial Times. "Are we going to go with an international market? If we go, where are we going? And if we go, are we going public or we are going private?"
What's more, Aramco executives have started to make a distinction between their preparatory work, which they said will be completed on time for 2018, and the decision to go ahead with the IPO, which is in the hands of the royal court.
"Things are on track for 2018," Aramco Chief Executive Officer Amin Nasser told Bloomberg at the conference. But when asked specifically if that included both the domestic and international IPO, he hedged his response. "That decision will be decided by the shareholder, not by the company. The shareholder will make the decision regarding the venues."
The head of the local exchange also opened the door to a Saudi-only listing. Khalid Al Hussan said the Tadawul had the "aspiration" to handle the listing alone. He also warned that even if the listing only takes place in Riyadh, the timetable for a sale in 2018 "will be very tight."
In a country were businessmen seldom speak publicly on government affairs, his comments were seen by many as another indication that Saudi Arabia is reconsidering its initial plan to list Aramco internationally.
"Going through the IPO process is complicated," Euronext CEO Stephane Boujnah said in an interview in Riyadh. "It's a big move even for a small company, so you can imagine when a very big company, which is so significant for the wealth of the country, is going through that process, it's normal that some compromises take time to be defined."
And yet, the IPO is so important for Prince Mohammed, who's become the kingdom's dominant political force, that few would dare to bet against it.
Click here for more
Bloomberg
30/03/2018
Saudi Arabia expects to unveil by the end of June rules to prevent large share price drops in newly-listed companies, the final regulatory step for the listing of oil giant Saudi Aramco, the head of
Arab News
30/03/2018
Petroliam Nasional Berhad (Petronas), the national oil company of Malaysia, and Saudi Aramco, the national oil company of Saudi Arabia, have announced the formation of two joint ventures for the Refi
Trade Arabia
29/03/2018
Saudi Aramco finalized a deal on Wednesday with Malaysian state energy company Petroliam Nasional Berhad (Petronas) to invest in a refinery project off Malaysia.
The Saudi oil giant agreed
Arab News
Ticker | Price | Change |
---|---|---|
ABAR | 138.00 | 2.00 (1.47 |
ADNOCGAS | 3.14 | 0.00 (0.00 |
ADNOCDRILL | 4.68 | 0.04 (0.86 |
ADES | 20.08 | 0.10 (0.50 |
BAHRI | 28.25 | 0.05 (0.17 |
14/09/2024
RIYADH: Saudi master developer Emaar The Economic City's SR8.7 billion ($2.32 billion) capital optimization plan is a "strategic response" to its current financial challenges, according to its CEO. <
Saudi Gazette
12/09/2024
Saudi wheat flour producer Arabian Mills for Food Products Co. has set its final initial public offering price at SR66 ($17.59) per share on the Tadawul main market. During the book-building proces
Arab News
04/05/2018
SABIC announced the successful completion of the pilot operation of the Methyl Methacrylate Monomer (MMA) and Poly Methyl Methacrylate (PMMA) plants and the commencement of commercial operations.
Saudi Gazette
05/04/2018
Standard & Poor's (S&P) has affirmed QIB's Issuer Credit Rating at A-, Qatar's leading Islamic bank has said in a release. According to S&P, the major contributing factors strengthening QIB's rating
Gulf Times
05/04/2018
Qatar National Bank (QNB) aims to increase its profit by 5-8 percent this year and loans and investments by 10-12 percent, helped by expansion into faster-growing Southeast Asia markets, its CEO told
The Peninsula