FOREIGN investors were allocated about 60 per cent of the shares on offer in Saudi Aramco’s US$11.2 billion stock sale, sources familiar with the matter said, marking a turnaround from the oil giant’s 2019 listing that ended up as a largely local affair.
The deal generated strong demand from the US and Europe, according to the sources, who declined to be identified as the information is private. Funds from the UK, Hong Kong and Japan also backed the share sale that drew orders worth more than US$65 billion in total, the sources said.
During the oil giant’s listing, overseas investors had largely baulked at valuation expectations and left the government reliant on local buyers. The US$29.4 billion initial public offering drew orders worth US$106 billion, and just 23 per cent of shares were allocated to foreign buyers.
Aramco shares initially fell as much as 1.4 per cent in Riyadh on Sunday (Jun 9), the first day of trading after completion of the secondary offering, before recouping all losses and closing up about 1 per cent higher.
The secondary offer drew about 450 funds, and more than 125 new international investors, sources familiar with the matter said.
Aramco confirmed that a majority of shares were allocated to foreign funds. International institutional investors now hold about 0.73 per cent of the firm, it said on Sunday.
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A key draw this time is the firm’s dividend, which is one of the world’s biggest. Investors willing to look past a steep valuation and the lack of buybacks would cash in on a US$124 billion annual payout that Bloomberg Intelligence estimates will give the company a yield of 6.6 per cent.
Saudi Arabia drew enough bids to cover all shares within hours after it kicked off the deal. The offer closed on Thursday and the kingdom stands to net at least US$11.2 billion in proceeds, excluding over-allotments – cash that will help fund a multi-trillion US dollar push to transform the economy.
The final pricing was towards the bottom half of a proposed range of 26.70 riyals to 29 riyals, though Aramco’s stock has been trading below the top end since the deal was announced and closed at 28.30 riyals on Thursday.
The extent of foreign participation was closely watched, with Aramco’s top executives holding a series of events in London and the US to drum up demand.
The Saudi government owns about 82 per cent of Aramco, while the Public Investment Fund holds a further 16 per cent stake. The kingdom will continue to be the main shareholder after the offering. BLOOMBERG