Exclusive: Saudi plans gradual listing at home for Aramco: sources

Reuters

Published Sep 09, 2019 11:15AM ET

Exclusive: Saudi plans gradual listing at home for Aramco: sources

By Marwa Rashad and Clara Denina

RIYADH/LONDON (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia plans to list 1% of state oil giant Saudi Aramco on the Riyadh stock exchange before the end of 2019 and another 1% in 2020, sources familiar with the matter told Reuters.

Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman eventually wants around 5% of the company to be public as the centerpiece of his plan to diversify the Saudi economy away from oil, attract foreign investments and create jobs.

But rather than go straight for an initial public offering on an international stock market, the company is planning a gradual listing at home first, according to people familiar with the matter.

"The thinking now is to list 1% this year, and another next year. This will be easier for the stock market to absorb," said one source familiar with the first stage of the planned listing.

"The smaller the target liquidity, the easier and the sooner the local IPO will be," said the source, adding that the listing would be open to qualified foreign investors.

Aramco is preparing to sell up to a 5% stake by 2020-2021, in what could be the world's biggest IPO. It is still meeting banks pitching for roles on the deal, and is expected to appoint the advisers in the coming days, sources have told Reuters.

"So far there has been a discussion about the symbolic 1% to 2% listing on the Tadawul (Riyadh bourse), with 1% being the consensus," said the second source, a senior banker.

Aramco did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

Based on the indicated $2 trillion valuation that Saudi Aramco had hoped to achieve, a 1% float would be worth $20 billion - huge for the local market.

Analysts and bankers, however, say $1.5 trillion is a more achievable valuation for the world's biggest oil company.