By Summer Said, Nicolas Parasie and Maureen Farrell
Saudi Arabia plans to list up to 5% of its state-owned oil
company on stock exchanges in Riyadh and possibly the U.S., setting
up an IPO that could pose big rewards for bankers and even bigger
risks for investors.
Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman outlined the plan
Monday. He said Saudi Arabian Oil Co., better known as Aramco, was
worth between $2 trillion and $3 trillion. That means a 5% listing
could in theory raise $100 billion to $150 billion for the kingdom
as it works to defray the impact of the steep drop in oil
prices.
The rub is the kingdom will be asking investors to pay up for
stakes in a once-private company that was nationalized four decades
ago -- when the "am" in "Aramco" stood for "American" -- and one
that remains a vital instrument of state policy.
The tough-to-answer questions include whether the operations
that pump the kingdom's vast oil reserves will be part of the deal,
what the company might be worth if they aren't and whether there
will be sufficient protections for the minority of public
investors.
The listing also would require a new threshold of public
accountability for a secretive state-run company that currently
doesn't disclose its annual revenue, profit or debt. It also could
bring new scrutiny to Saudi Arabia's proven reserves of crude oil,
which have stood at around 260 billion barrels for years without
significant new finds, even though the company pumps more than
three billion barrels of oil or more a year.
"Aramco's listing has many benefits, the most important and
before everything is transparency," the prince said in an interview
with television network Al Arabiya. "It will be under the
supervision of all Saudi banks, all analysts, all Saudi thinkers.
Even more, all international banks and research and planning
centers in the world will monitor it intensively."
The prince made his comments on Aramco as he announced a plan to
transform the kingdom's oil-dependent economy into one more focused
on private enterprise. The Saudis are trying to raise cash during a
period of sharply lower oil prices and transition to a world that
is less dependent on oil.
Aramco would be jointly listed in Saudi Arabia and possibly the
U.S. in a process that could take six to nine months, the prince
said.
A top Saudi oil adviser, Ibrahim Muhanna, told The Wall Street
Journal last week that New York was the leading contender for the
second listing, with London and Hong Kong also in contention.
Prince Mohammed first broached the possibility of an initial
public offering for Aramco earlier this year. It isn't clear how he
came up with the valuation of $2 trillion to $3 trillion.
Still, the prospect of an Aramco listing has sparked a frenzy
among bankers, who have set aside early skepticism and now travel
regularly to Riyadh in the hope of winning a role in what could
become one of the largest IPOs ever.
Despite the deputy crown prince's comments, one person recently
briefed on the kingdom's plans said officials still are determining
how to handle issues around the kingdom's oil reserves.
The person reckoned any listing could take at least 12 to 18
months to move forward.
Bankers say no adviser has been retained yet for the IPO.
International banks such as J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. have been
active in the kingdom for decades and can fall back on close ties
with the Saudi government. Consultancy McKinsey & Co. also is
playing an important role by advising the Saudi government, these
bankers have said.
Aramco likely will push banks to take below-average fees to get
a cut of the deal, the person briefed on the kingdom's plans
said.
Typically, IPO fees range between 5% and 7% of a deal's size.
For deals over $10 billion, the average fee is 2%, according to
Dealogic.
Fees on Aramco likely would come in closer to 1%, the person
said.
The person also said the offering likely will be smaller than
current figures suggest and likely will include only the company's
refining and petrochemical arms.
The company manages but doesn't own the kingdom's reserves, and
a number of Saudi experts and insiders have said Saudi Arabia
wouldn't include its production assets in any listing.
Its methods and reserves are tantamount to state secrets.
An offering still could top the largest on record -- Alibaba
Group Holding Ltd.'s $25 billion IPO that valued the Chinese
e-commerce company at $169 billion, according to Dealogic. It would
easily top the largest oil deal on record -- the 2006 $11 billion
IPO of state-controlled Russian oil company, OAO Rosneft.
Robin Mills, nonresident fellow for Energy at the Brookings Doha
Center, said Aramco would have to spell out its loyalties to the
government and the royal family clearly in any IPO.
It also would have to disclose more details about its reserves
production and finances, he said.
"There would also have to be minority shareholder protection and
a fiduciary duty for the board," Mr. Mills said.
Paul Hodges, a special adviser to ICIS, a petrochemicals
information company, said the culture change awaiting Aramco would
be similar to what Chinese companies went through 15 years ago when
that country prepared to enter the World Trade Organization.
"The process of listing will completely change the character of
the company, and demand a new openness from its senior management,"
Mr. Hodges said.
Write to Summer Said at summer.said@wsj.com and Nicolas Parasie
at nicolas.parasie@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
April 25, 2016 19:50 ET (23:50 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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