Why Saudi Arabia is listing its crown jewel
SAUDI oil giant Aramco has raised $25.6 billion in the world’s biggest initial public offering, sources said.
The oil-rich kingdom has put a value of $1.7 trillion on Aramco as it prepares to sell 1.5 per cent of the company to fund its “Vision 2030” economic transformation plan.
But why is Saudi Arabia, which has reaped trillions of dollars from its vast energy deposits, having to sell off a piece of its economic crown jewel to position itself for a post-oil future?
Isn’t Saudi Arabia wealthy already?
Despite its almost unimaginable oil wealth, Saudi Arabia’s finances have sagged along with the price of crude, causing its budget deficit to balloon.
It still has around $500bn in fiscal reserves run by the country’s central bank and some $250bn managed by the public investment fund (PIF), the kingdom’s main investment vehicle.
“It’s a fact that Saudi Arabia is gradually running out of money,” General David Petraeus, who is currently chair of the KKR Global Institute, said in a November television interview in Abu Dhabi. “The bottom line is that they need the money, they need that outside investment that is crucial to delivering ‘Vision 2030’.”
Another factor driving the launch could be young ruler Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s desire to “have a flashy project to show he is reforming the country”, he said.
Pressing ahead with the Aramco listing, despite it falling short of the hoped-for $2 trillion valuation, is more about “following through with a political statement by the crown prince”, said Karen Young from the American Enterprise Institute.
“It is about making a debut to the international investor community, and to legitimise the state to a global audience of peers.”
How will the funds be used?
Since Prince Mohammed came to power, Saudi Arabia has unveiled plans for a series of “giga projects” that will soak up tens of billions of dollars, but also hopefully bring investment and thousands of jobs.
Those visions include the Red Sea Project, to be built across an archipelago of 90 islands off the Saudi port city of Jeddah, and stretch into nearby deserts and mountains.
NEOM, a $500bn futuristic mega city, is planned on the northern Red Sea coast, complete with flying taxis and talking robots.
And last year, construction of the Qiddiya “entertainment city” was launched near Riyadh, with the blueprints including high-end theme parks, motor sport facilities and a safari area.