Exclusive: Saudi Aramco snubs UBS and Bank of America for listing roles - sources

Reuters  |  LONDON 

By Denina and Afanasieva

LONDON (Reuters) - has not invited and of America Merrill Lynch to pitch for senior advisory roles in its stock market listing because they have not lent money to the giant in recent years, according to five

The two investment banks, among the world's biggest, have not been asked to attend meetings in in the coming weeks where its rivals will pitch for global mandates for the IPO, said the people familiar with the matter.

They have been frozen out by Aramco, the sources added, despite having operations in the and wanting to take part in the initial public offering, which could be the biggest in history.

Saudi Aramco, of America Merrill Lynch and Swiss lender all declined to comment.

The sources said the exclusion of the banks reflected a corporate culture in the region of tying advisory mandates to how much of its own money a lender is willing to commit.

Aramco will need to borrow significant sums from Western banks in years to come to keep up with its investment pledges.

Among its plans, it aims to invest $300 billion in in the next decade and expand its refining and petrochemical capacity around the world.

has also not been invited to pitch, according to two who did not say why the British had been excluded.

declined to comment.

The three excluded banks could still be awarded more junior advisory or bookrunner roles in the stock market listing of the Saudi national champion, which is planned for this year.

The IPO is a central part of Mohammed bin Salman's reform drive aimed at restructuring the kingdom's economy and reducing its dependence on The government, which aims to float up to 5 percent of the company, says Aramco is worth $2 trillion.

CITI, GOLDMAN

Bankers see such advisory roles in the IPO as a gateway to a host of other deals they expect to flow from the kingdom's plan to revamp its economy via a wide privatisation programme.

Sources told last week that Aramco has invited banks including Citi, and Deutsche to pitch for global mandates at the end of January or beginning of February in the city of Dhahran, where the company is headquartered.

There is no complete data available for the money investment banks have lent to Aramco, but fees generated from lending activities are closely correlated.

of America Merrill Lynch has not generated any fees from loans to Aramco since 2010, and generated just $180,000 in fees between 2002 and 2010, according to data. does not appear as a at all in the 15-year period covered by the data.

which has already been appointed as an for the listing, generated the biggest fees from Aramco for loans, at $9.5 million over the 15-year period.

and HSBC, which is already mandated, were third and sixth biggest loan fee recipients with $8.1 million and $5.6 million respectively. Deutsche is in the top 20, while Goldman is lower down at 34, but bought a slice of Aramco's $10 billion credit facility on the secondary market last year.

(Additional reporting by in Dubai and Dmitry Zhdannikov in London; Editing by Pravin Char)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, January 16 2018. 17:29 IST