Saudi Aramco has listed shares on the Saudi Stock Exchange (Tadawul) in the world’s biggest-ever initial public offering (IPO). Shares began trading on December 11, and Saudi Aramco’s stock rose by 10%, the Tadawul’s daily limit.
Its first-day performance lifted its valuation from the $1.7trn initially estimated to $1.87trn, then briefly hit $2trn on its second day. This puts it well above Apple, the world’s next-largest company with a current market capitalisation of around $1.1trn.
Announcing the listing on November 3, the state-owned energy giant said that the offer period would run from November 17 to December 4, and the IPO would be priced on December 5.
The pricing was duly announced at the top of its indicative range, at SR32 ($8.53) per share. The total of $25.6bn exceeds the $25bn flotation of e-commerce colossus Alibaba in 2014, previously the biggest in history, but is nonetheless lower than some analysts had anticipated.
While there was some international interest in the offering, Saudi Aramco principally relied on domestic and regional investors.
Aramco is seen as the most profitable company in the world by some distance. According to Fortune’s Global 500 2019 listing, the oil company announced profits of around $111bn in 2018.
Saudi Aramco says that it plans to pay shareholders annual aggregate cash dividends of at least $75bn, on top of any special dividends, starting in 2020.
See also: The Report – Saudi Arabia 2019
Investors eye oil prices and security
Oil market stability had been a concern in the run-up to the IPO, with trade tensions between China and the US holding down prices of late. Meanwhile another wave of tariffs, worth roughly $156bn, is expected to be announced by the US on December 15.
However, December also marks the start of one of the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries’ regular two-day meetings, at which production cuts were announced that should put renewed upward pressure on energy markets.
Another area of focus in recent months has been security, following September’s drone attacks on the Abqaiq oil facility and the Khurais oil field in Saudi Arabia, both of which are owned by Aramco.
However, these concerns appear to have had limited effect on the strength of domestic demand, with the company’s local listing nearly three times oversubscribed.
Driving diversification
Saudi Arabia is one of the biggest producers and exporters of oil; it owns around 15% of the world’s proven oil reserves. Oil and gas account for half the country’s GDP and around 70% of its export earnings.
The public listing of Aramco forms part of Vision 2030, a socio-economic reform plan launched in April 2016 aimed at steering the Kingdom’s economy away from oil and towards sectors such as tourism and health care. Money raised from Aramco’s listing will be allocated to the country’s Public Investment Fund (PIF), which has been charged with spearheading many of the projects under Vision 2030.
The plan is also pushing for the privatisation of public services in areas such as transport, utilities and education, with securing more foreign direct investment (FDI) in Saudi Arabia a key dimension of the vision.
The Kingdom signed $15bn in agreements in late October at the Future Investment Initiative conference, its annual investment forum, now in its third year. These deals spanned energy, transport and manufacturing, and are set to notably increase FDI inflows.
Also in late October, the Red Sea Development Company announced it is seeking a loan of more than SR10bn ($2.7bn) from four to five local banks to help finance new tourism projects, in addition to equity provided by the PIF.
The Red Sea Development Company’s plans include the creation of a special economic zone with its own regulatory framework and entry visas, designed to incentivise foreign players. It plans to complete the first phase of the project by 2022, at which point it hopes to attract 300,000 tourists a year.
The Red Sea Project is one of three major projects backed by the PIF, alongside the Qiddiya entertainment project and the $500bn NEOM economic zone, all designed to boost tourism and entertainment earnings.
Saudi Arabia has similarly signed a series of deals to invest in other countries. During a visit from President Jair Bolsonaro at the end of October, the Kingdom announced that it will invest up to $10bn in projects in Brazil.