Over half of Aramco share sale allocated to foreign funds
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Over half of Aramco share sale allocated to foreign investors

Over half of Aramco share sale allocated to foreign investors

International demand for the secondary share sale was greater than for Aramco’s IPO in 2019

Reuters
Aramco allocate about 60% of share sale to foreign funds

Saudi Arabia placed over half of an $11.2bn share sale in Aramco with foreign investors, two people with knowledge of the matter told Reuters on Saturday.

Saudi Arabia has been seeking to lure international investment to pour tens of billions of dollars into projects to diversify away from its reliance on oil. Yet foreign investment has repeatedly missed targets.

“There were multiple orders from the US, UK, Hong Kong and Japan,” one of the sources said.

International demand for the secondary share sale was greater than for Aramco’s IPO in 2019, sources had previously told Reuters.

Aramco said on Friday shares were priced at $7.27 (SAR27.25) after the company set a price range of SAR26.70-29.00.

The secondary offering, codenamed Project Bond by the banks involved, took months of planning.

As a result of the transaction, more than 120 new international investors will be added to Aramco, one of the sources said.

“The overall demand for the offering was greater than $65bn across global blue chip institutions and the domestic retail offering,” he said.

Saudi de facto ruler Crown Prince and Prime Minister Mohammed bin Salman’s Vision 2030 is funding endeavours as diverse as electric vehicles to building futuristic cities in the desert, mainly via its Public Investment Fund (PIF).

The $925bn sovereign fund, after scaling back some of its flagship giga-projects, aims to sharpen its focus to drive forward the vision.

Proceeds from Aramco share sale are likely to be funneled to the PIF, sources and analysts have said, though funds could also help plug the kingdom’s budget deficit which has risen as the oil price has weakened.

Read: Aramco set to raise $11.2bn after selling shares at lower end of expectations

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