KHOBAR,
Saudi Arabia, Feb 23 (
Reuters) -
Saudi Aramco's initial public offering (IPO) could encourage other
Gulf countries to list their oil assets, a leading regional economist said, but the oil giant must clear uncertainties over taxation,
OPEC policy and ownership of crude.
Nasser Saidi, a former economy minister of
Lebanon, told
Dubai Eye Radio in an interview broadcast on Wednesday that
Aramco has to address how the company will separate its assets and liabilities from those of the state. "Many countries could follow in the region. (The) UAE I think could potentially be attracted to this,"
Saidi said. "We have long discussed the possibility that well-performing state enterprises could be listed, and potentially this could open the road for that," Saidi, also a former chief economist and head of external relations at the
Dubai International Financial Centre, added. While Aramco is the world's largest oil firm, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait and
Qataralso hold major oil assets that are managed by state companies. The listing of Aramco , expected to be theworld's biggest IPO and raise tens of billions of dollars, is acentrepiece of the Saudi government's ambitious "Vision 2030"plan to diversify the economy beyond oil. When the plan was announced in June last year, it pledged to"transform Aramco from an oil-producing company into a globalindustrial conglomerate", although Saudi officials still debatethe shape the company should take.The Saudi government plans to list up to 5 percent of Aramconext year on the local bourse and international stock markets. The proceeds will be used to invest in other sectors likelyto create jobs for young Saudis. But for the plan to succeed, Saidi said Aramco must addressissues related to governance, transparency and "who owns thenatural resource wealth of Saudi Arabia". "The big issue really is one of public finances andseparating out private ownership from public and stateownership," he added. Saidi also pointed to questions concerning the 20 percentroyalty and 85 percent tax that Aramco pays to the government,which many investors believe could lower its value in an IPO. "There is a lot of uncertainty as to what sort of taxationregime will be applied to Aramco, whether or not resources underthe ground will be included and how do you separate out thosefrom those above and other activities," he said. This could lead to other questions on Saudi Arabia's leading role in the Organization of the
Petroleum Exporting Countries, which sets production targets and allocates them among members. "What happens if you have a board? Are you going to separate out political decision-making ... from that which is in the best interest of Aramco?" he said. (Reporting by
Reem Shamseddine and Katie Paul; Editing by
Sami Aboudi and
Dale Hudson)