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Published 14 Jan, 2020 07:11am

Banks lobby Aramco for incentive fee after slim IPO pickings

DUBAI: Global banks who worked on Saudi Aramco’s record initial public offering (IPO) are pushing for an additional “incentive fee”, three sources familiar with the matter said, as they try to boost relatively low earnings from the deal.

Aramco said on Sunday it had exercised a “greenshoe option” to sell an additional 450 million shares, raising the size of its IPO to $29.4 billion - comfortably the world’s biggest listing to date.

But the energy giant’s earlier decision not to market the deal internationally means most banks involved in selling Aramco’s shares will earn less than $5m each, according to two of the sources, a low amount for such a large deal.

Now banks are in discussions with Aramco for the payment of the “incentive fee” under a clause in the contract that gives the Saudi government the discretion to pay banks an extra sum if the listing went well.

One source said they are arguing this will keep the banks committed if Aramco opts to sell more shares on an international exchange.

The payment of incentive fees — used to keep the base fees on a listing low and push banks to work harder - is increasingly common for IPOs in Europe and the US but rare in the Gulf. The sources did not say how much extra the banks could be paid, although it would likely vary between institutions.

Aramco was not immediately available to comment.

The oil giant picked nine banks as joint global coordinators in September: JPMorgan, Morgan Stanley, Bank of America Merrill Lynch, Citigroup, Credit Suisse, Goldman Sachs, HSBC, NCB Capital and Samba Financial Group.

All the banks either declined to comment or did not immediately respond to a request for comment when contacted by Reuters.

Published in Dawn, January 14th, 2020

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