Saudi Arabia is focused on a domestic stock market listing for its state oil company, Aramco, and no decisions have been made for any international share sale, the Saudi ambassador to the UK told S&P Global Platts on Monday. “We are tending now towards looking at a Tadawul listing,” said Prince Khalid bin Bandar, referring to the Saudi stock exchange, after speaking at the Royal United Services Institute in London. “But if that doesn’t work, then we will look otherwise. But the important thing is to be pragmatic, depending on the situation, and we’ll wait and see how [the domestic listing] goes.”
No international venues had been ruled out if a listing outside Saudi Arabia proceeds, he added. “Everything is a candidate,” the prince said. “We will do what’s right for Saudi Arabia.” The much hyped Aramco IPO, first announced by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in 2016, is a centerpiece of the kingdom’s economic transformation plan, with officials aiming for a company valuation of $2 trillion, though analysts say $1.5 trillion is more realistic.
If the kingdom’s desired valuation is achieved, the rumored 5% public listing could bring in $100 billion that could be used for development programs aimed at weaning Saudi Arabia off its reliance on oil revenues.
Reports indicate that the kingdom could float a small portion of the planned total listing — perhaps 1% or 2% — on the Tadawul, before looking internationally, where exchanges in London, New York, Tokyo and Hong Kong are among the contenders. The Tadawul is the Middle East’s largest exchange, with a market cap of Riyal 1.80 trillion ($479 billion). A 1% listing, even at the lower range of valuation estimates, would make Aramco one of the largest stocks traded on the Saudi bourse in terms of market value.
Details of the IPO will be announced later this month, Aramco Chairman Yasir al-Rumayyan said Monday, according to a report by Russia’s Prime news agency.