Saudi Aramco Does Not Plan to Increase Its Stake in Horse Powertrain 

Aramco's Executive Vice President for products and customers Yasser Mufti poses for a photograph during an interview with Reuters, in Milan, Italy August 31, 2024. (Reuters)
Aramco's Executive Vice President for products and customers Yasser Mufti poses for a photograph during an interview with Reuters, in Milan, Italy August 31, 2024. (Reuters)
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Saudi Aramco Does Not Plan to Increase Its Stake in Horse Powertrain 

Aramco's Executive Vice President for products and customers Yasser Mufti poses for a photograph during an interview with Reuters, in Milan, Italy August 31, 2024. (Reuters)
Aramco's Executive Vice President for products and customers Yasser Mufti poses for a photograph during an interview with Reuters, in Milan, Italy August 31, 2024. (Reuters)

Saudi Aramco does not plan to increase its 10% stake in fuel-based engines joint venture Horse Powertrain while it continues to pursue more deals to expand its downstream presence, a senior executive told Reuters.

Aramco in June agreed to buy a 10% stake in Horse Powertrain, valuing the venture with Renault and Geely at around 7.40 billion euros ($8.2 billion), as part of its growing interest in the automotive industry, including in the development of so called e-fuels.

"The 10% stake hits all of the boxes that we have for our financial and strategic objectives for this company," Yasser Mufti, Aramco's executive vice president for products and customers, said in an interview in Milan, where he was to follow Formula 1 Grand Prix in Monza at the weekend.

"I saw a lot of speculation about that but we were always targeting a 10% stake," he said, in the first public comments by a senior Aramco executive on the company's plans for the Horse Powertrain joint-venture.

Geely and Renault will each own 45% of the venture, which will supply gasoline engines, hybrid systems and gearboxes for internal combustion engine vehicles.

Aramco, the world's top oil exporter, is expected to finalize the stake purchase later this year.

Horse Powertrain aims to become a global supplier for automakers, which can buy "off-the-shelf" engines compatible with advanced fuels, Mufti said. "By 2050, half the (global auto) fleet will still be conventional combustion engines or hybrids".

More M&A deals will come for Aramco, after those it closed in the past 12 months, which include the purchases of Chilean fuel retailer Esmax and of stakes in Gas & Oil Pakistan and US-based MidOcean, its first LNG investment abroad.

"We're very busy in this space," Mufti said.

"The downstream business is where we have M&A opportunities and now LNG (liquefied natural gas) as well. We have targets and markets and we work with these opportunities as they come."

Downstream refers to refining, and sales and marketing of oil and gas products.

Last year, Aramco spent around $9 billion on acquisitions, up from $4.2 billion in 2022, according to LSEG data, and is now discussing more deals, including acquiring stakes in China's Shandong Yulong Petrolchemical and Hengli Petrochemical.

Aramco on Tuesday also announced it was broadening its partnership with the Aston Martin Formula 1 team, ahead of the 2026 implementation of new Formula 1 regulations, including requirements for sustainable fuels.

Mufti said Aramco was investing "hundreds of millions" to build two demonstration facilities with partners in Saudi Arabia and Spain, to develop e-fuels, that can be used in internal combustion engine vehicles and help reduce carbon footprint.

Made by synthesizing captured CO2 emissions and hydrogen produced using renewable or CO2-free electricity, e-fuels are not cheap. Their estimated cost is 2 euros per litter if produced at scale, four times the typical wholesale price for petrol made from oil.

The two facilities would be "excellent starting points" to help Aramco understand how to scale up e-fuels production and bring costs down, Mufti said. "I can be 100% confident that the current cost structure will be improved on dramatically".

Costs of making e-fuels could fall to between 0.70-1.33 euros per liter in 2050, according to lobby group eFuel Alliance.



Saudi Arabia Launches Investment and Acquisition Facilitation Program to Provide Liquidity to Industrial Firms

A factory in Madinah. (SPA)
A factory in Madinah. (SPA)
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Saudi Arabia Launches Investment and Acquisition Facilitation Program to Provide Liquidity to Industrial Firms

A factory in Madinah. (SPA)
A factory in Madinah. (SPA)

The Saudi Ministry of Industry and Mineral Resources has launched the Investment Facilitation and Acquisition Program, which aims to offer diverse investment opportunities that align with investors’ goals, while also assisting industrial companies in expanding their production or addressing challenges in business development.

In a statement on Tuesday, the ministry said the program provides three key advantages: facilitating acquisitions within the industrial sector, offering liquidity to industrial companies, and presenting suitable opportunities for investors.

The ministry added that the program’s launch reflects its commitment to expanding and promoting industrial investment opportunities, creating an attractive business environment, and providing programs that help industrial companies increase production and enhance their competitiveness.

The process for applicants to the Investment Facilitation and Acquisition Program involves several steps, including submitting applications from both investors and companies, attaching the necessary documents through a designated electronic registration form, and analyzing the submitted applications to identify interested parties and determine compatibility.

If a match is found between an investor’s interests and a participating company, the two sides are connected. The investor then conducts an analysis and evaluation of the company and may submit an investment or acquisition offer to the owner if the evaluation aligns with their investment strategy.