Saudi Arabia weighs delaying international part of Aramco IPO

A domestic share sale in Riyadh could still happen next year

Javier Blas & Dinesh Nair | Bloomberg 

Saudi Aramco
A Saudi Aramco employee sits near the Saudi Aramco stand at the Middle East Petrotech 2016 in Manama, Bahrain. (File photo: Reuters)

is considering delaying the portion of the giant initial public offering of its state oil company until at least 2019, according to people familiar with the situation, who said a domestic share sale in could still happen next year.

A two-stage is one of several options being considered, the people said, asking not to be identified because discussions are private. Another plan would include listing in next year and privately selling a stake in Aramco to one or several cornerstone investors, one of the people said.

The IPO is the centrepiece of a broad-ranging economic reform program proposed by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the dominant political force in the kingdom. Any delay would be a setback to his plans as well as the plethora of investment banks and exchanges eyeing millions in fees and commissions.

has been making contingency plans for a possible delay of the IPO, expected to be the largest in history, Bloomberg News reported last month. While the government has insisted the original timetable remains on track, several important decisions have yet to be taken, including a location for the listing, stretching the ability of the company to sell shares overseas before the end of next year.

There is a precedent for bringing in cornerstone investors before a groundbreaking commodities IPO. sold in 2009 a stake through a convertible bond ahead of its 2011 IPO, still the largest ever in London where the company raised nearly $10 billion.

Alternative plans

Despite the work on alternative plans, said earlier this month that schedule for the blockbuster initial public offering wasn’t “slipping” and the country still planned a sale by the end of 2018.

The government is “moving right ahead” for an IPO of Saudi Aramco in the second half of next year, Oil Minister Khalid Al-Falih said in Moscow. “There is nothing to indicate that schedule is slipping in any way.”

The Financial Times on Friday reported that could shelve the portion of the IPO, instead opting for a local listing in 2018 combined with a stake sale to a Chinese investor.

The government has said the sale of 5 per cent of the shares could value the company at as much as $2 trillion, though analysts have tended to give lower estimates. If achieves its valuation, the 5 per cent stake it plans to sell would raise about $100 billion. That would eclipse the $25 billion raised by in 2014.

London and New York exchanges are vying for a role in Aramco IPO, with Hong Kong, Singapore, and also trying to attract the sale. 

First Published: Sun, October 15 2017. 02:03 IST