Saudi Aramco IPO proves a hit with small investors

Saudi Aramco shares will start trading on Dec. 11, the Saudi securities exchange Tadawul said. (File/AFP)
Updated 06 December 2019
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Saudi Aramco IPO proves a hit with small investors

  • Saudi citizens were by far the biggest number of applicants, with 4.95 million seeking to buy in the IPO
  • Saudi Aramco shares will start trading on Dec. 11, the Saudi securities exchange Tadawul said

RIYADH: More than 5 million people - Saudi citizens, resident expats and nationals of other GCC countries - have bought shares in the initial public offering (IPO) of shares in Saudi Aramco, the biggest stock market flotation in history.

Because of the huge demand for shares in the flagship initiative of the Vision 2030 strategy to diversify the Saudi economy away from oil dependency, all those who applied for up to 1,500 shares will get the full entitlement, but bigger buyers will be scaled back.

Samba Capital, the lead manager for the record-setting share sale, announced that 5.06 million individual subscribers bought shares in the offer, spending nearly SR50 billion ($13.3 billion). Most of them did so online, or via the special ATM arrangements for the IPO.

Applications were received from all age groups, but the biggest number of applicants came in the 31 to 45-year-old age group, who accounted for nearly half the number of shares on offer to private investors. Some 1.7 million people aged between 46 and 64 also applied for shares.

The final offer price was set at SR32 - the top of the range indicated by Aramco at the beginning of the book-building process two weeks ago, valuing the IPO at $25.6 billion and the company at $1.7 trillion, the biggest in the world.

Those who applied for smaller numbers of shares will have their applications met in full, but because of the big demand for the offering among private investors, those who applied for 2,000 shares or more will have their final allotment scaled back, and funds will be returned.

Anybody who applied for 100,000 or more will receive only 12 percent of their application number.

The government could decide to increase the number of shares on offer by a further 15 percent of the IPO via what the investment bank adviser calls the “green shoe” mechanism, designed to ensure price stability when the shares start trading.

Saudi citizens were by far the biggest number of applicants, with 4.95 million seeking to buy in the IPO. But there was also significant demand from expats resident in the Kingdom, with more than 106,000 applying for shares.

Saudi Aramco shares will start trading on Dec. 11, the Saudi securities exchange Tadawul said on Twitter on Friday.


Aramco CEO sees ‘catastrophic consequences’ for oil if shipping doesn’t resume in Strait of Hormuz

Updated 49 min 38 sec ago
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Aramco CEO sees ‘catastrophic consequences’ for oil if shipping doesn’t resume in Strait of Hormuz

DUBAI: Saudi Arabia’s Aramco , the world’s top oil exporter, said on Tuesday that there would be “catastrophic consequences” for the world’s oil markets if the Iran war continues to disrupt shipping in the Strait of Hormuz.

The disruption has not only upended the shipping and insurance sectors but ‌also promises to ‌have drastic domino effects on ​aviation, ‌agriculture, ⁠automotive and ​other industries, ⁠Aramco CEO Amin Nasser told reporters on an earnings call.

Nasser noted global inventories of oil were at a five-year low and said the crisis will lead to drawdowns at a faster rate, adding that it was critical that shipping in the strait ⁠resumed.

“There would be catastrophic consequences for ‌the world’s oil markets and ‌the longer the disruption goes ​on, and the more drastic ‌the consequences for the global economy,” he ‌said.

Nasser also said a small fire from an attack last week on Aramco’s Ras Tanura refinery, its largest domestically, was quickly extinguished and brought under control, adding that ‌the refinery was in the process of being restarted.

Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said on Tuesday ⁠they ⁠would not allow “one liter of oil” to be shipped from the Middle East if US and Israeli attacks continue, prompting a warning from President Donald Trump that the US would hit Iran much harder if it blocked exports from the vital energy-producing region.

His comments come after Aramco reported a 12 percent drop in annual profit mainly due to lower crude prices. It also announced it would repurchase ​up to $3 billion worth ​of shares in its first-ever buyback.