Saudi Arabia Transfers Aramco Shares Worth $80 Billion to Wealth Fund
DUBAI—Saudi Arabia transferred shares worth about $80
billion in oil giant Aramco to its wealth fund as part of efforts to diversify
the kingdom’s hydrocarbon-dependent economy.
The transfer of a 4% stake in state-owned Saudi Arabian Oil
Co., known as Aramco, will support the Public Investment Fund’s plan to grow
its assets under management to over $1 trillion by 2025, from about $480
billion currently, the Saudi government said Sunday.
The Saudi government, which will remain the largest
shareholder in Aramco with a stake of more than 94%, has sought to monetize the
country’s massive oil assets and use the proceeds to invest in industries
outside of oil as part of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s plan to
restructure the economy by 2030.
To help meet that goal, Prince Mohammed, the kingdom’s
day-to-day ruler, has tasked PIF to invest in companies and industries
untethered to hydrocarbons. The government had also transferred the $29.4 billion
it raised from Aramco’s initial public offering in 2019 on the Saudi stock
exchange to the PIF to deploy.
Analysts say PIF could use the Aramco stake as collateral to
raise more debt, or sell the shares in the market in phases or in chunks to
strategic investors. The wealth fund has multiple options to monetize the
Aramco stake and, unlike the government, can be more discreet with its
fundraising plans, they added.
Earlier this month, people familiar with Aramco’s strategy
said the kingdom has restarted plans to list more shares of Aramco, the world’s
most valuable oil company, with an ambition to sell as much as a $50 billion
stake, which at current valuations would be 2.5% of the company. The listing of
shares would be by far the largest in the history of capital markets and could
prove difficult to pull off.
The stake-sale effort is still in the planning stage, and
could still be delayed or changed, the people said. Riyadh has floated several
different plans over the years aimed at raising funds via Aramco, some of which
have ultimately faltered or been abandoned.
The share transfer to PIF will help bolster the fund’s
strong financial position and its high credit rating in the medium term,
according to the government. Ratings agency Fitch in February assigned PIF an
“A” rating, while Moody’s gave it an “A1” rating, as the fund prepares to tap
the international debt markets.
The fund started raising bank debt in 2018 with an $11
billion facility, followed by a $10 billion loan in 2019 that was repaid a year
later. Its governor, Yasir al-Rumayyan, said in September 2021 that PIF was
working with BlackRock Inc. on an environmental, social and governance
framework and planned to issue its debut green bonds soon.
Meanwhile, the wealth fund will also start receiving
dividends from Aramco and can market itself as a bigger fund while competing
with others for global assets.
The fund, which had assets under management of about $150
billion in 2015, has used the cash it has received or raised since then to
invest in businesses as diverse as electric-vehicle manufacturer Lucid Motors
Inc., Citigroup Inc., Facebook Inc. and the Premier League soccer club
Newcastle United. It invested billions in SoftBank’s Vision Fund.
It has also played a more active role in the global markets
after receiving $40 billion from the kingdom’s reserves in early 2020. It plans
to invest another $10 billion in listed stocks this year, according to people
familiar with the fund’s plan.
Some PIF officials, however, have privately questioned the
fund’s strategy, given its mixed record investing internationally and its
struggles to attract significant foreign capital to help finance domestic
projects.
The wealth fund is seen by the government as the engine
driving the kingdom’s economic transformation, with a five-year strategy to
inject at least $40 billion a year into the local economy. But it isn’t clear
if any of the international companies that PIF has invested in are looking at
the kingdom for expansion. PIF doesn’t publicly release its financial reports.
Foreign investment in Saudi Arabia has remained stubbornly
low and some companies are scaling back their operations or delaying promised
expansion plans. Foreign direct investment into Saudi Arabia was $5.4 billion
in 2020, less than half the level of a decade ago and well below the $19
billion that the country had targeted. It was on track to top $6 billion in
2021 based on data through the third quarter. That excludes the $12.4 billion
sale of a stake in a Saudi pipeline company to foreign investors.
Some foreign investors also became cautious on their plans
in the kingdom after men working for Prince Mohammed killed dissident
journalist Jamal Khashoggi in late 2018. Riyadh says the crown prince wasn’t
involved in the killing.
The Saudi investment ministry has said interest in the
country remains high, pointing to a 250% annual increase in new investor licenses
in 2021.
Aramco said the latest deal is a private transfer between
the kingdom and the PIF, and Aramco isn’t a party to the transfer and didn’t
enter into any agreements or pay or receive any proceeds from it.
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