Global Consortium Acquires 49% of Aramco

Global consortium acquires 49 percent of Aramco (Reuters)
Global consortium acquires 49 percent of Aramco (Reuters)
TT

Global Consortium Acquires 49% of Aramco

Global consortium acquires 49 percent of Aramco (Reuters)
Global consortium acquires 49 percent of Aramco (Reuters)

Saudi Aramco announced that an international investor consortium, led by affiliates of BlackRock and Hassana, acquired a 49 percent stake in Aramco Gas Pipelines Company, a subsidiary of Aramco, for $15.5 billion.

The consortium comprises leading institutional investors, including, amongst others, Keppel Infrastructure Trust, Silk Road Fund, and China Merchants Capital.

As part of the transaction, first announced in December 2021, Aramco Gas Pipelines Company and Aramco entered into a 20-year lease and leaseback arrangement with Aramco's gas pipeline network.

Under the arrangement, Aramco Gas Pipelines Company will receive a tariff payable by Aramco for the specified gas products that flow through the network, backed by minimum commitments on throughput.

The long-term investment by the consortium represents further progress in Aramco's portfolio optimization program and highlights the robust investment opportunities presented by Aramco's significant infrastructure assets.

It also underlines Aramco's long-term solid outlook and the appeal of Saudi Arabia to leading institutional investors.

Meanwhile, Chairman of Aramco Board Yasir al-Rumayyan described the International Petroleum Technologies Conference (IPTC), held recently in Riyadh, as an opportunity to boost cooperation and find solutions for the long-term global energy challenges.

The official explained that Aramco could contribute to the global energy sector through its robust platform, which prompted the company to adopt the Fourth Industrial Revolution technologies.

It helps raise its efficiency level and minimize emissions from the company's business.

Rumayyan noted that Aramco innovates and explores effective carbon management solutions to reduce its environmental impact and carbon emissions.

Aramco's carbon emissions levels are at their lowest, and the company proved its financial flexibility and operational reliability while taking actions to maintain the health and safety of its employees.

Rumayyan added that Aramco is working to draw a more sustainable future by developing technologies that reduce emissions of hydrocarbon energy sources, mainly if applied on a global scale.

He pointed out that Aramco focuses its efforts on enabling communities and individuals, ensuring the sustainability of the business, and developing a commercial system.

The company launched several energy sector initiatives, IKTVA and Namaat, which are an integral part of its long-term vision to develop an energy sector capable of competing globally.

For his part, Aramco President & CEO, Amin H. Nasser Amin Nasser highlighted at a plenary session on the sidelines of the conference entitled "Enhancing Global Recovery through Sustainable Energy" the risks associated with the lack of investments in oil and gas.

He warned that high energy prices in Europe and parts of Asia affect customers worldwide, and it is mainly due to investment strategies and policies of specific sectors, while energy investment has been halted.

Investment is now focused on renewable energy and alternatives without perceiving the need to support all long-term sources and ensure supplies to maintain global growth, according to Nasser.



Inflation Rose to 2.3% in Europe. That Won't Stop the Central Bank from Cutting Interest Rates

A view shows the Bercy Economy and Finance Ministry as a metro operated by the Paris transport network RATP passes over the Pont de Bercy bridge in Paris, France, November 28, 2024. REUTERS/Stephanie Lecocq
A view shows the Bercy Economy and Finance Ministry as a metro operated by the Paris transport network RATP passes over the Pont de Bercy bridge in Paris, France, November 28, 2024. REUTERS/Stephanie Lecocq
TT

Inflation Rose to 2.3% in Europe. That Won't Stop the Central Bank from Cutting Interest Rates

A view shows the Bercy Economy and Finance Ministry as a metro operated by the Paris transport network RATP passes over the Pont de Bercy bridge in Paris, France, November 28, 2024. REUTERS/Stephanie Lecocq
A view shows the Bercy Economy and Finance Ministry as a metro operated by the Paris transport network RATP passes over the Pont de Bercy bridge in Paris, France, November 28, 2024. REUTERS/Stephanie Lecocq

Inflation in the 20 countries that use the euro currency rose in November — but that likely won’t stop the European Central Bank from cutting interest rates as the prospect of new US tariffs from the incoming Trump administration adds to the gloom over weak growth.
The European Union’s harmonized index of consumer prices stood up 2.3% in the year to November, up from 2.0% in October, the EU statistics agency Eurostat reported Friday.
Energy prices fell 1.9% from a year ago, but that was offset by price increases of 3.9% in the services sector, a broad category including haircuts, medical treatment, hotels and restaurants, and sports and entertainment, The Associated Press reported.
Inflation has come down a long way from the peak of 10.6% in October 2022 as the ECB quickly raised rates to cool off price rises. It then started cutting them in June as worries about growth came into sharper focus.
High central bank benchmark rates combat inflation by influencing borrowing costs throughout the economy. Higher rates make buying things on credit — whether a car, a house or a new factory — more expensive and thus reduce demand for goods and take pressure off prices. However, higher rates can also dampen growth.
Growth worries got new emphasis after surveys of purchasing managers compiled by S&P Global showed the eurozone economy was contracting in October. On top of that come concerns about how US trade policy under incoming President Donald Trump, including possible new tariffs, or import taxes on imported goods, might affect Europe’s export-dependent economy. Trump takes office Jan. 20.
The eurozone’s economic output is expected to grow 0.8% for all of this year and 1.3% next year, according to the European Commission’s most recent forecast.
All that has meant the discussion about the Dec. 12 ECB meeting has focused not on whether the Frankfurt-based bank’s rate council will cut rates, but by how much. Market discussion has included the possibility of a larger than usual half-point cut in the benchmark rate, currently 3.25%.
Inflation in Germany, the eurozone’s largest economy, held steady at 2.4%. That “will strengthen opposition against a 50 basis point cut,” said Carsten Brzeski, global chief of macro at ING bank, using financial jargon for a half-percentage-point cut.
The ECB sets interest rate policy for the European Union member countries that have joined the euro currency.