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Alpha Dhabi H1 profit $1.79bn

Adjusted EBITDA rises to $2.36bn.

Borouge Q2 net profit $193m

The H1 revenue stood at $2.72 billion.

ADNOC Drilling H1 revenue $2.37bn

The company posted a net profit of $692m.

Eni profit falls due to dip in oil prices

Q2 net profit fell by 18% to $637 million.

Emirates NBD H1 profit $3.40bn

Total income rose by 12 percent in the same period.

Saudi Aramco share sale nets $12.35 billion on investor demand

Saudi Aramco's share sale nets more than expected. (AFP File)
  • The offering announced in May was the largest in the Middle East since Aramco's record initial public offering (IPO) in 2019, bolstering Saudi's finances.
  • Aramco, the jewel of the Saudi economy that remains mostly state-owned, announced on May 30 that it would sell 1.545 billion shares.

Riyadh, Saudi Arabia — Saudi Aramco netted $12.35 billion, $1 billion more than expected, from a secondary share sale after exercising an over-allotment option, the deal’s stabilizing manager said on Wednesday.

An additional 154.5 million shares were issued in response to demand from investors, Merrill Lynch Kingdom of Saudi Arabia said, taking the total number to nearly 1.7 billion.

The offering announced in May was the largest in the Middle East since Aramco’s record initial public offering (IPO) in 2019, bolstering Saudi Arabia’s finances as it spends heavily to pivot its oil-reliant economy.

“Following the exercise of the over-allotment option, the total offering size will be 1,699,500,000 shares, representing a total offering amount of SAR 46.31 billion ($12.35 billion),” Merrill Lynch Kingdom of Saudi Arabia said in a statement.

Last month Aramco said the offering raised a minimum of $11.2 billion, with the final size dependent on whether Merrill Lynch uses the over-allotment or “greenshoe” option to sell additional shares by July 9.

Aramco, the jewel of the Saudi economy that remains mostly state-owned, announced on May 30 that it would sell 1.545 billion shares, or about 0.64 percent of its issued shares, on the Saudi stock exchange.

It was widely seen as a test of foreign investor interest more than halfway through the kingdom’s campaign known as Vision 2030, whose so-called giga-projects include NEOM, a planned futuristic megacity in the desert.

Saudi Arabia is the world’s largest crude oil exporter and the government’s stake in Aramco, one of the world’s biggest companies by market capitalization, is around 81.5 percent after the second share sale.

The kingdom’s sovereign wealth fund, the Public Investment Fund, and its subsidiaries control about 16 percent of Aramco.

Aramco reported record profits in 2022 after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine sent oil prices soaring, allowing Saudi Arabia to record its first budget surplus in nearly a decade.

But the Saudi cash cow saw its profits drop by a quarter last year because of lower oil prices and production cuts.