Business

Saudi Arabia transfers Aramco stock worth $80B to kingdom's wealth fund

Saudi Arabia said Sunday it will transfer four per cent of the stock in the state-run oil giant Aramco to a sovereign wealth fund, an infusion valued at nearly $80 billion US, as the kingdom tries to overhaul its energy-dependent economy.

Move part of government's long-term strategy to restructure economy

Several people wearing hard hats are pictured at an oil production site.
Aramco engineers and Saudi journalists look at a natural gas liquids recovery plant in Al Hawiyah, Saudi Arabia, in June 2021. (Amr Nabil/The Associated Press)

Saudi Arabia said Sunday it will transfer four per cent of the stock in the state-run oil giant Aramco to a sovereign wealth fund, an infusion valued at nearly $80 billion US, as the kingdom tries to overhaul its energy-dependent economy.

The announcement on the state-run Saudi Press Agency comes as the oil firm is valued at just under $2 trillion US and as oil trades above $90 US a barrel — its highest level since 2014.

Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the assertive son of King Salman, made the decision to transfer the stock, the state media report said. It will go to the Public Investment Fund, the kingdom's sovereign wealth fund, which has been Prince Mohammed's vehicle to invest in everything from Uber to British soccer team Newcastle United. The fund is also part of the prince's Neom project along the Red Sea coast.

"His Highness added that the transfer of these shares is part of the kingdom's long-term strategy aimed at supporting the restructuring of the national economy," the report said. That will include creating private-sector jobs in the kingdom, it added.

Pivot away from oil

Saudi Arabia has reaped the benefits of a spike in oil prices after the coronavirus pandemic crashed prices at one point into negative territory, but it also sees the growing worldwide concern over climate change being fuelled by burning fossil fuels. Prince Mohammed's plans hope to see that oil wealth pay to create jobs for the kingdom's youth to pivot away from oil over time.

The Public Investment Fund has also invested in the electric car manufacturer Lucid Motors Inc. of Newark, Calif.

The fund did not immediately acknowledge what its plans for the stock would be and did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Ratings agency Moody's Investors Service last week said the fund's assets had grown to $412 billion US in 2020, up from $152 billion in 2015.

The kingdom remains the largest shareholder in the firm, with some 94 per cent of the company. The Saudi Arabian Oil Co. has long served as both the main economic engine in the kingdom and the main source of funds for its ruling Al Saud royal family.

Saudi Arabia offered a sliver of shares of the oil firm on Riyadh's Tadawul stock market in 2019. That listing made Aramco one of the world's most-valued companies, alongside Apple and Microsoft.

A share of Aramco stood at 37.3 Saudi riyals, or $9.94 US, ahead of trading on Sunday.