ADNOC (Abu Dhabi National Oil Company) has announced that it has raised more than $1.1billion through the IPO of its subsidiary ADNOC Drilling, which was vastly oversubscribed.
Investors placed more than $34 billion of orders for Abu Dhabi-based Adnoc Drilling Company PJSC’s $1.1 billion initial public offering, further underscoring the global clamor for equity deals.
ADNOC sold 11% of the subsidiary in what ranks as the biggest stock-sale yet in the emirate. Adnoc Drilling’s shares were offered at 2.30 dirhams each and will begin trading in Abu Dhabi on Sunday at 10 a.m. local time.
The deal comes as IPO activity in the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia, particularly for energy and commodity companies, picks up. Valuations have been bolstered by this year’s surge in raw-material prices as economies recover from the coronavirus pandemic.
Adnoc Drilling’s IPO is expected to be followed soon by those of Emirates Global Aluminium and Fertiglobe Holding, a fertilizer company part-owned by Adnoc. In Saudi Arabia, a $1.2 billion listing of ACWA Power International — the biggest in the kingdom since that of oil giant Aramco in 2019 — will probably price on Monday.
Adnoc, which pumps almost all the UAE’s oil and gas, is increasingly seeking to raise money from its assets and help the government fund efforts to diversify the economy. Since mid-2020, it has garnered about $15 billion by selling leasing rights over pipelines and property to the likes of Brookfield Asset Management Inc. and Apollo Global Management Inc. The IPO of Adnoc Drilling is the first since it sold some of its fuel-distribution business in 2017.
The lead banks on Adnoc Drilling’s transaction were First Abu Dhabi Bank PJSC, Goldman Sachs Group Inc., HSBC Holdings Plc and JPMorgan Chase & Co. Adnoc will retain an 84% stake in the company, while Houston-based Baker Hughes will keep its 5% share.