As a profitable state-owned entity, Aramco has thrived in an age where the tides of capitalism have gravitated towards private enterprise. (Reuters/Maxim Shemetov)
From taboo-busting religious support to easy credit and fervent jingoism, Saudi Arabia pulled out all the stops to prop up Aramco’s IPO but it is unlikely to be the blockbuster it once hoped for.
The world’s most profitable company is seeking to raise around $25-billion — a fraction of the $100-billion it once sought — from its much-delayed initial public offering that is heavily focused on domestic and Gulf investors.
The sale of 1.5% of the energy giant has so far been oversubscribed 1.7 times, it said last week after its retail tranche ended, with bidding for institutional investors set to close on Wednesday.
That however pales in comparison to Saudi Arabia’s other blockbuster listings, including the 2014 IPO of the National Commercial Bank, the kingdom’s biggest lender, which was oversubscribed more than 23 times.
In 2006, a record 10 million Saudis — roughly one in two of the population — subscribed to property developer Emaar’s IPO while Aramco attracted only about half as many retail investors.
“Preparations for the public listing of Aramco… have stepped up a gear but the signs are that it is unlikely to be the blockbuster sale that the kingdom once hoped for,” said Capital Economics.
The sale is on course to beat Chinese retail giant Alibaba’s $25-billion record IPO in 2014, but “the proceeds would barely cover the kingdom’s budget deficit for a year”, the research group added.
Barring a last-minute surge from institutional investors, interest appears relatively muted despite a nationwide advertising blitz, banks offering easy “IPO loans” and nationalists calling for investment as a patriotic duty.
Aramco also dangled sweeteners for local investors, including promises of higher dividends and the possibility of bonus shares if they hold on to the stock.
Conflicting religious advice
But in an ultra-conservative nation promoting what observers call a de-emphasis on religion amid Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s sweeping modernisation drive, some Saudis say they are torn between conflicting religious advice.
Senior cleric Abdullah al-Mutlaq sought to drum up support for the IPO, saying it was “halal”, or permissible in Islam, and that even religious scholars were likely to participate.
But influential cleric Abdelaziz al-Fawzan, who campaigners say was arrested last year, claimed in a video that resurfaced recently on social media that part of the IPO was not compliant with Islamic principles.
“I want to subscribe (to the IPO) but… Fawzan says it’s usury and Mutlaq says it’s halal. We are lost between them,” said one Twitter user.
Some of Saudi Arabia’s wealthiest families have been pressed to take part.
That reportedly includes billionaire tycoon Prince Al-Waleed bin Talal who was among several businessmen locked in Riyadh’s Ritz-Carlton hotel during a 2017 crackdown on corruption.
“If I don’t invest people will say ‘I am not patriotic’,” a Riyadh-based businessman said.
‘So much hype’
“There’s so much hype: ‘Prince Al-Waleed is investing, Malaysian investors are investing, it’s very safe’ — but I cannot forget 2006,” he added, explaining his decision to steer clear.
The businessman said he lost around one million riyals ($267 000) in the kingdom’s worst stock market crash in 2006, much of which came through three bank loans that he is still repaying.
But a senior government figure dismissed such concerns.
“Aramco extracts oil from the ground for barely $3 a barrel,” he said.
“Even if crude prices stay low Aramco will remain highly profitable for a long time, generating wealth for its investors.”
International investors, however, have baulked at Aramco’s valuation of between $1.6-trillion and $1.7-trillion — a figure still well short of Prince Mohammed’s desired valuation of $2-trillion.
Aramco last week said that of the $31.7-billion in bids received so far from institutional investors, foreign investors accounted for just 10.5 percent.
Luring international funds for Prince Mohammed’s ambitious megaprojects and transformation plan for a post-oil era was once the centrepiece of the IPO, first proposed in 2016.
Malaysian state energy company Petronas, which was expected to invest, said in a statement that “after due consideration the company has decided not to participate in Aramco’s (IPO) exercise”.
However Gulf ally Abu Dhabi plans to pump as much as $1.5-billion, while the Kuwait Investment Authority is also considering an investment, Bloomberg News reported.
But amid tepid demand, Aramco executives have cancelled IPO roadshows in the United States and Europe.
“The Aramco IPO is shaping up to be an economic demonstration of the strengths and weaknesses of Saudi Arabia’s new reliance on nationalism,” said Kristin Diwan from the Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington.
“The population may be mobilised in support of national goals, but international support is weakened by its excesses.”
© Agence France-Presse