Institutional offering in ‘solutions by stc’ IPO hit $125.6bn

A unit of the Saudi Telecoms Company, solutions by STC, has completed the bookbuilding process and set the IPO price at SR151. (Supplied)
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Updated 19 September 2021
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Institutional offering in ‘solutions by stc’ IPO hit $125.6bn

  • The company earlier announced its intention to float and offer a 20 percent stake of 24 million shares

DUBAI: The institutional side of solutions by stc’s initial public offering was oversubscribed by 13,003 percent, raising SR471.1 billion ($125.6 billion).

A unit of the Saudi Telecoms Company, solutions by STC, has completed the bookbuilding process and set the IPO price at SR151, it said in a Tadawul filing.

The company earlier announced its intention to float and offer a 20 percent stake of 24 million shares. It allocated 90 percent of the total offered shares to institutional investors.

Meanwhile, retail investors, which have been allocated 10 percent of the total offered shares, have started the subscription process that will last for three days until Sept. 21. Final allocations are due on September 27. Trading is expected on or around September 29.

The total value of the funds raised by solutions by stc is the largest ever in the Saudi market, exceeding the SR 446 billion funds raised by Aramco in 2019.

 


SABIC posts $31bn revenue, maintains $9bn dividend despite loss 

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SABIC posts $31bn revenue, maintains $9bn dividend despite loss 

RIYADH: Saudi Basic Industries Corp. swung to a net loss of SR25.78 billion ($6.87 billion) in 2025, as divestment-related charges and weaker petrochemical prices weighed on earnings, even as the company generated SR116.53 billion in revenue. 

The loss compares with a net profit of SR1.54 billion a year earlier, while revenue declined 1.03 percent from 2024 levels, according to a Tadawul filing  

In a statement, the company attributed the slight fall in revenue to lower average selling prices across key products, partially offset by higher sales volumes. 

The company’s operational profit stood at SR4.37 billion in 2025, while earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization amounted to SR17.88 billion. 

In a statement, ‏Abdulrahman Al-Fageeh, CEO of SABIC, said: “2025 reflected a moderately improving macroeconomic landscape. Yet, production overcapacity persisted in the petrochemical industry, continuing to squeeze margins and depress utilization rates.”  

He added: “Amid these conditions, SABIC remained focused on meeting its 2025 priorities.”  

Al-Fageeh, who is set to step down as SABIC’s CEO at the end of March, said the company achieved a total recordable incident rate of 0.07, the lowest in SABIC’s history. “This represents a 22 percent year-over-year improvement in performance across the combined areas of environment, health, safety, and security.”  

According to SABIC, losses from discontinued operations increased by SR20.8 billion compared to the previous year.  

This was primarily attributed to reporting non-cash losses of SR15.2 billion related to the fair value assessment of the planned exit from petrochemical assets in Europe and thermoplastic engineering businesses in the Americas and Europe.  

In a separate Tadawul filing, SABIC said its board approved the distribution of interim cash dividends totaling SR4.5 billion for the second half of 2025, equivalent to SR1.5 per share. The dividend will be paid on March 31 to shareholders registered as of March 8. 

The second-half payout follows a similar SR4.5 billion dividend distributed for the first half of 2025, bringing the company’s total shareholder distributions for the year to SR9 billion. 

“We remain committed to delivering value to our shareholders, announcing the distribution of SR9 billion in dividends for the full year of 2025,” added Al-Fageeh. 

The CEO revealed that construction of the SABIC Fujian petrochemical complex remained on track, reaching 95.3 percent completion. 

He further said that SABIC’s innovation program provided market-driven solutions for customers through 148 new product introductions in 2025. 

“All these achievements helped to strengthen SABIC’s brand value, which surpassed $5 billion for the first time. Having grown 5.4 percent over the year, the SABIC brand is now valued at $5.19 billion,” he concluded. 

SABIC also announced the appointment of Faisal Mohammed Al-Faqeer as its new CEO, effective April 1, 2026, replacing Abdulrahman Saleh Al-Fageeh. 

“SABIC Board of Directors extends its sincere thanks and appreciation to  Abdulrahman Saleh Al-Fageeh, who has been an instrumental figure in guiding the company through a crucial period of strategic optimization designed to ensure its long-term success and reinforce its role at the forefront of the global petrochemical industry,” the company said in a Tadawul statement. 

Al-Faqeer has extensive experience in the petrochemicals and refining industries. He currently serves as senior vice president of liquids-to-chemicals at Saudi Aramco.