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  • Visualizing Saudi Aramco’s Massive Oil Reserves

    Saudi Aramco controls 259 billion barrels worth of oil and gas reserves, which is unmatched by any other company globally. This is a key factor in the company’s massive $1.8 trillion valuation. Behind Saudi Aramco, American company ExxonMobil comes in second with 17.7 billion barrels of oil equivalent, followed by another American company, Chevron, with 11.2 billion barrels of oil equivalent.

  • NextDecade, Saudi Aramco sign 20-year LNG supply deal

    U.S. liquefied natural gas (LNG) provider NextDecade (NEXT.O), opens new tab has signed a non-binding agreement with Saudi Aramco (2222.SE), opens new tab to supply 1.2 million tonnes per annum (MTPA) of LNG for 20 years, the companies said on Thursday.
    The deal comes at a time when Aramco is seeking to strengthen its position in the LNG market, which is set to grow globally by 50% by 2030, especially in the United States, where LNG capacity is set to almost double over the next four years.

  • Latham Advises on Saudi Aramco’s US$11.2 Billion Secondary Offering

    Latham & Watkins has advised the bookrunners on the secondary public offering by The Government of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and Saudi Aramco of ordinary shares of Saudi Aramco. The offering comprised a secondary public offering of 1.545 billion shares at SAR27.25 (US$7.27) per share. Latham also represented the underwriters in Saudi Aramco’s landmark IPO in 2019, one of the largest IPOs in history.

  • Saudi Aramco announces completion of secondary share sale for $11.2 bln

    Saudi Aramco (2223.SE), opens new tab has completed a secondary share sale raising $11.23 billion, the oil company and the Saudi government said in a statement on Tuesday.

  • Over a year in making, Aramco stake sale brings rare foreign investment to Saudi

    Saudi Arabia began preparing more than a year ago to sell a new chunk of state oil giant Aramco (2222.SE), opens new tab, targeting foreign investment that has lagged goals for years and is needed for an ambitious economic transformation.
    The preparations led by CEO Amin Nasser paid off.
    Over half of the $11.2 billion Aramco shares were sold to foreign investors, a far cry from five years ago, when they largely shunned its $29.4 billion initial public offering, citing concerns about risks around governance, regional geopolitics and the environment.

  • Saudi Aramco Needs To Balance Investor Needs Against Oil Prices

    Saudi Arabia’s oil giant Aramco looks caught between a rock and a hard place. It seeks to win over new investors, especially foreign ones, while at the same time – as the world’s top crude oil exporter and the biggest OPEC producer – not allowing oil prices to crash. Aramco has just priced its secondary share offering at the lower end of the previously set range, in a sign that it is now focused on winning over international investors.

  • Saudis Said to Hand About 60% of Aramco Offer to Foreigners

    Foreign investors were allocated about 60% of the shares on offer in Saudi Aramco’s $11.2 billion stock sale, people familiar with the matter said, marking a turnaround from the oil giant’s 2019 listing that ended up as a largely local affair.

  • Saudi Arabia set to raise more than $11.2 bln from Aramco stock offering

    Saudi Arabia is set to raise more than $11.2 billion after pricing its offering of Aramco (2222.SE), opens new tab stock toward the lower end of the targeted range, the Wall Street Journal reported on Thursday.
    Saudi Aramco's bankers have told investors it plans to price the shares at 27.25 Saudi riyals, or $7.27 each, according to the report.
    The stake sale, a first since Aramco's record-setting IPO in 2019, was announced last week in a landmark deal to help fund Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman's plan to diversify the economy.

  • As investment drive falters, Saudi milks Aramco ‘cash cow’

    "The cash raised will certainly help support government spending priorities. But it will ultimately be a fiscal booster more than a long-term cure for funding needs," said Robert Mogielnicki of the Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington. Saudi officials have since last year said the timeframe for some Vision 2030 projects would be extended, though they have not given details and said other projects would be accelerated. Finance Minister Mohammed al-Jadaan said last month that global "shocks" since Vision 2030's launch in 2016 -– wars in Ukraine and Gaza, the pandemic, inflation and supply chain disruptions –- had spurred a revision of reform plans. Read more: https://www.al-monitor.com/originals/2024/06/investment-drive-falters-saudi-milks-aramco-cash-cow#ixzz8cPnesbyH

  • Sinopec awarded $1.37 Billion Contract from Saudi Aramco

    Sinopec International Petroleum Services Corporation, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Sinopec Oilfield Service Corporation and Saudi Arabian Oil Company (Saudi Aramco) entered into a turn-key fixed-price contract for the in-country procurement and construction of Packages 6 and 7 of the Phase 3 Pipeline Project Clusters of the Master Gas System (“MGS”),