What is Saudi Aramco? | CNBC Explains - YouTube

Channel: CNBC International

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Saudi Aramco is the state-owned oil company of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
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It鈥檚 the biggest oil company in the world, helping the country become the biggest exporter of crude oil.
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London, Hong Kong and New York鈥檚 stock exchanges are all wooing the oil powerhouse,
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as Saudi Arabia鈥檚 government looks to take a part of the company public.
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If that happens, it鈥檚 set to be the largest IPO in history.
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Saudi Aramco was born in 1933 out of an agreement
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between Saudi Arabia and California-based oil company Socal.
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This agreement, like many granted to big U.S. and British oil companies at the time,
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gave it the exclusive right to explore and extract oil on Saudi territory.
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Originally called the California Arabian Standard Oil Company,
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it was renamed the Arabian American Oil Company in 1944, or as we now know it, by its acronym Aramco.
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For years, Aramco was run by a consortium of U.S. oil companies
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including the predecessors of Chevron, Texaco and Exxon Mobil.
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But following the creation of OPEC, Saudi Arabia and several other oil producing countries
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began nationalizing their natural resources.
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By 1980, the Saudi government had completed its buyout of Aramco鈥檚 assets,
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eventually creating the Saudi Arabian Oil Company in 1988.
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Saudi Aramco鈥檚 main business is pumping oil and then selling it around the world
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to customers in places like Japan, the U.S. and China.
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Aramco reports vast oil reserves, which when compared to the largest energy companies,
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make them one of the biggest players in the world energy market.
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Beyond drilling, the company also refines crude into oil products like gasoline and chemicals.
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And in 2012, Aramco launched a new trading arm, which it says buys and sells
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about 1.5 million barrels of chemicals and polymer products every day.
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This helps keep more of that revenue in house, by reducing its reliance on outside traders.
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Working out Aramco鈥檚 revenues, however, is a little more difficult.
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The sovereign-owned company has never published a financial report.
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Saudi officials say Armaco is set for a record $2 trillion valuation.
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But not everyone agrees, with some analysts slicing that valuation in half.
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A $2 trillion valuation means Aramco鈥檚 market cap dwarfs the likes of Microsoft, Alphabet
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and the world鈥檚 most valuable publicly traded company, Apple.
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This financial strength was emphasized in a leaked earnings report,
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revealing a net income of $33.8 billion for the first half of 2017.
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The report, which was disputed by the company, showed they earned
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more than four times Exxon Mobil, the world鈥檚 biggest energy company by market cap.
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The report could offer potential investors a better understanding
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of the scale of Saudi Aramco ahead of its eagerly anticipated IPO.
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Aramco is expected to offer about 5% of the company to investors, with the proceeds from
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the sell off to be funneled into non-oil sectors such as tourism, healthcare and mining.
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Aramco says it will list its public shares on the Saudi domestic stock exchange, the Tadawul.
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An international option is "under active review."
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But concerns about whether the Tadawul can manage such a large offering
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has given global bankers and exchanges around the world the motivation
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to continue to lobby Aramco to also list with them.
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The U.K.鈥檚 Financial Conduct Authority even created new rules
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that allow sovereign-controlled companies such as Aramco to achieve a premium listing
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on the London Stock Exchange, without following the usual rules and practices.
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When the IPO will take place is also unclear.
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Some analysts say the reality is that Riyadh is in no rush
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to privatize their crown jewel as oil prices rise once again.
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There are also some within the Saudi government, that doubt the logic behind privatization.
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Critics also believe that peak oil demand is a long way off
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and that selling, even a small part of Aramco, is a bad move.
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Helping decide when and where Aramco鈥檚 historic IPO happen
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are CEO and President Amin Nasser and Saudi Energy Minister Khalid al-Falih.
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But it鈥檚 the crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman who will have the final say.
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The IPO is a big part of bin Salman鈥檚 Vision 2030
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and its effort to diversify Saudi Arabia鈥檚 oil dependent economy.
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Yet while the young heir is trying to move his country's economy away from hydrocarbons,
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Aramco鈥檚 $2 trillion valuation will only be achieved if the company can show that their fossil fuel reserves
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that they're trying to diversify away from, are still worth investing in.
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The trillions of dollars Riyadh is hoping to raise from the IPO
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would in theory increase support for privatizing more of its economy.
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But it could also be critical for the future stability of the kingdom.
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Its success will ensure the ruling royal family鈥檚 ability to maintain their social contract with its people,
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generous state handouts in return for political loyalty.
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Hi guys, Tom here. Thanks for watching.
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