"Currently, there are 100 companies listed on the Tasi and I would expect that number to double within the coming two years. Being held in Saudi Arabia, this IPO Summit is creating a healthy environment for IPO partners and bankers to do business together for the benefit of the stock market and the wider Saudi economy."
Dr. Nassir Al Dawood, Deputy Governor of Riyadh, opened the summit, on behalf of its patron, HRH Prince Salman Ibn Abdul Aziz Al Saud, Governor of Riyadh. Dr. Al Dawood, thanked delegates, speakers and sponsors for attending and stressed the great role that IPOs make in attracting FDI.
"Increasingly Saudi Arabian companies are using IPOs as a vehicle for raising capital. This is now attracting not only local but international investors, with overseas capital being drawn into the local market supplementing the existing high levels of liquidity."
"With oil now touching $96 per barrel, investors still have a healthy appetite for IPOs. Strong GDP growth will drive the market and provide the stamina for numerous public offerings in the months ahead," added Marwaha.
According to Ernst & Young, 20 Middle Eastern companies raised a total of $3.9bn in IPOs in the second quarter of 2007, of which Saudi featured two of the three largest offerings in the region worth a combined total of
$2.34bn. Currently earning a fivefold return, the Saudi IPO market is expected to continue to grow as the kingdom's financial sector makes progress in liberalisation, regulations and standards.
Elsewhere on the summit's opening day agenda, Mutlaq Hamad Al Morished, Chairman, of Saudi Kayan Petrochemical Company, delivered a case study of Kayan's successful $1.8bn IPO.
Other case studies included Abdullah Al Fallaj, VP Finance, of publicly quoted Ma'aden (Saudi Mining Company) who is planning to raise an additional $2.5bn through an IPO. With its vast mineral wealth, mining is seen as the next investment boom in the Kingdom after, oil and real estate.
The summit also addressed the fundamental issues affecting IPOs, such as reasons for launching, essential management restructuring, conversion of family businesses and exit strategies.
Tomorrow sees the start of the post-Summit Islamic Debt Capital Markets' Boot Camp on Sukuk securitisation as an alternative to raising finance with conventional debt instruments and public offerings.
The 2nd Saudi IPO Summit received solid industry support with Samba as headline sponsor. Principal sponsor is NCB Capital, primary sponsor is Al Bilad Bank, lead sponsor is Calyon. Supporting partner is Jadwa Investment. Gold sponsor is NAEEM Investment Company; silver sponsors are the Saudi Investment Bank, Swicorp, Oracle, TNI and TradeNet.
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Posted by Anne-Birte Stensgaard, Senior News Editor
