The Saudis are no longer revealing oil revenues after Aramco’s listing

An employee oversees the commercial prices of Saudi Aramco shares in 2019.

Photographer: Faisal Al Nasser / Bloomberg

Saudi Arabia has failed to disclose projected oil revenues following Aramco’s listing, as doing so could give clues as to the state energy giant’s dividend plans.

The kingdom relies on the payments of Aramco, the world’s largest oil company, will help cover the budget deficit and bolster an economy that has been attacked this year by coronavirus blockages and falling crude oil prices. The Dhahran-based company sold shares for the first time in December 2019, although the government still owns about 98%.

“The reason we do not disclose the breakdown of oil and non-oil is because of Aramco’s presence as a listed company,” Finance Minister Mohammed Al-Jadaan told a news conference after the budget announcement of the kingdom for next year. “The government treats Aramco as a tax provider. We have income that comes from Aramco, taxes that come from Aramco and also dividends, since the government is the biggest shareholder ”.

Read: Saudi Arabia joins spending cuts when 2021 budget is announced

This is the first time in years that the kingdom – which received dividends from Aramco even before it was made public – has not broken down projected oil revenues.

.Source

Leave a Comment