DAVOS: Amin Nasser, the president and CEO of Saudi Aramco, had a busy few days at last week’s World Economic Forum (WEF) annual meeting in Davos.

“We had about six hours at the International Business Council, three hours at the oil and gas community, two hours on the climate change initiative — and then about 40 bilateral meetings. In Davos, you make every minute count,” he said.

Nasser was speaking in a private meeting salon at the Hotel Grischa near the main railway station of the Swiss Alpine town. He had a plane to catch, but spent some of his precious remaining minutes at Davos speaking to Arab News — about the Fourth Industrial Revolution, technology, the environment, carbon emissions and sustainability.

But first we talked about the forthcoming initial public offering (IPO) of Saudi Aramco. The planned stock exchange listing of the world’s biggest oil company and the Kingdom’s economic dynamo had been slated for later this year, but that timetable slipped into 2021, as Nasser explained.

Did he feel any sense of disappointment or anticlimax that the IPO had been delayed? “No. What I have to say about the IPO is that a lot of work has been done and the commitment is definitely there. The proof of that is what has already been done by the government and by the company. We have changed the tax rules, made a new concession agreement, changed Aramco into a joint stock company, and introduced a lot of fiscal reforms to facilitate a listing,” he said.

Just a few weeks ago, Aramco announced the results of an audit by DeGolyer & MacNaughton, the leading independent expert on the oil industry, which showed Aramco is sitting on a treasure trove of 263.1 billion barrels of oil within its concession area, higher than previous estimates. That was one of the essential requirements for the IPO.

“Everything that is required for listing is there. If the government decided, it could be done in no time,” he said. So why had it not happened?

Basically, Nasser explained, because an alternative strategic play came into view. Aramco decided there were more pressing priorities, especially a tie-up with SABIC, the Kingdom’s petrochemicals and industrial giant.

“We came to the government and said that our desire is to be the leading petrochemical company globally. We can do that organically or inorganically. We are always looking for opportunities in this field and we have huge investments in petrochem with Dow Chemical and Sumitomo. However, if you want to be the leader, you need an acquisition, a major acquisition. You need a platform, a good platform so you can go global, especially with our decision to have 2 million to 3 million barrels of oil going to petrochemical.

“So we approached the Public Investment Fund (Saudi Arabia’s ambitious sovereign wealth fund) to see if it was interested in selling their shares in SABIC, and they were interested. We have been in discussions with them and we went back to the government and said … based on our governance requirements and regulations, you cannot list Aramco while we are going through a major acquisition. It doesn’t work. That process needs to take its course, and the government said that’s fine. Because also you cannot list and then come in three or four months later and say you’re going to acquire a company. That would have to be in the IPO prospectus.

The deal with SABIC — which is valued in the region of $70 billion — will transform Aramco into a global petrochemicals giant, and will take time to put together.

“We need to close a share-purchase agreement and we’re in discussions now with PIF about that. When we reach an agreement we have to go and seek regulatory and antitrust approval. That will take almost until the end of the year 2019, or maybe a little bit more; we don’t know because you need approval from a lot of countries where SABIC has major operations. SABIC is not a small company, it’s a huge company, so you need a lot of approvals from lots of countries,” he said.

“After you finish that you need a minimum of one year to reflect the purchase in your balance sheet. It has to be consolidated and show what is the impact on our balance sheet — where is the integration, where is the value, because the investors will want to see … After that you can go to the market,” he said.

“It’s going to happen. There is no doubt the commitment is there, and it was also further confirmed by the Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and by the Minister of Energy Khalid Al-Falih. Both of them say the commitment for the IPO is there,” he insisted.

But Nasser admitted the issue is how to fund the SABIC acquisition, which will be the biggest takeover ever in the Middle East.

“We have different funding mechanisms to finance it. We have our cashflow, and also other funding mechanisms like the bond market, and other tools that are needed for a sustained capital program. So all of these financial tools will be utilized as soon as we reach an agreement,” he said, without disclosing the amount of the bond issue. It will be Aramco’s first foray into global debt markets, but Nasser was encouraged by the recent enthusiastic response toa $7.5 billion bond the Kingdom raised.

The upcoming Aramco bond will take place amid market conditions that were the subject of much gloomy prognosis in Davos. The thought-leaders at the WEF see turbulence in global economic and financial markets in 2019, and worry about the trade “war” between the US and China, and other global economic disruptions.

The implications for the oil markets are obvious. An economic slowdown in China and other big economies would sap the appetite for oil and gas, and potentially lead to a price fall for the Kingdom’s most precious asset.

However, based on his conversations in Davos, Nasser did not appear over-concerned about global economic forecasts.

“It’s our view that the market, in terms of global inventories, is moving toward staying within the five-year average. That’s a sign of balanced-out tightness of supply and demand, which is very important. We are optimistic about the market in 2019 in terms of pricing and in terms of tightness of supply-demand. The more it is balanced, the better for the market. And our view is that there is still healthy demand,” he said. He reckoned there was only a 15 percent chance of a global recession in 2019.

“So far China is healthy in terms of demand, as reflected in imports from Saudi Aramco, and it has been growing. Asia in general is a major market — it is the epicenter of demand in terms of global energy right now, and there is a lot of growth. China and India are very important for us,” he said.

So that leaves the way clear for Aramco to get on with its core long-term strategy — to be a global leader in oil, gas, petrochemicals, refining and energy trading — as well as a pioneer in energy technology.

Aramco is already one of the dominant forces in the global oil industry, of course, helping to set the price of crude through its supply deals with other oil producers. But its immediate ambitions are in gas, where it has so far played a lower-profile role globally. Nasser wants to change that, especially in terms of domestic Saudi consumption.

“By 2030, 75 percent of the utilities sector (in the Kingdom) will be on gas, and the rest will be renewable and nuclear alternatives. So we will have gas going outside the Kingdom to export markets, either by pipeline or by LNG. So (we) will be exporters for the first time,” he said.

Aramco is looking at potential deals in the international gas business, with potential partners in Russia, the US and Australia, he said, adding: “We will be a global leader in gas from within the Kingdom, but we are also looking to be a major player globally.”He is also said to be considering acquisitions in the US shale gas industry. “We have no interest in shale oil ... we have plenty of conventional oil at a much lower cost. But we are interested in gas, let me put it that way,” he said.

At Davos, one of the major themes was the challenge posed by climate change, and Nasser was keen to point out that Aramco is among the “best in class” of the big energy groups. He welcomed a recent academic study that classed Saudi Arabia as the second best in the world among energy producers for carbon intensity in upstream emissions, second only to energy minnow Denmark and way ahead of the other big producers, the US and Russia.

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