- Trump 'triumphs' in Albanian art exhibition
- Marquez eyeing seventh MotoGP crown in Ducati dream team
- UK teen pleads guilty to girls' murder that triggered riots
- Sinner defies dizziness to reach De Minaur quarter-final in Melbourne
- Swiatek steps into unknown against Navarro in Melbourne quarters
- Swiatek has 'closure' after WADA says won't appeal in doping case
- Stock markets rise, bitcoin hits high as Trump returns
- Lys says 'nicest week in my life' as historic Melbourne run ends
- Activists slam 'destructive' Indonesia forest conversion plan
- Fire at Belgrade retirement home kills eight
- Qualifier Tien will remember 'surreal' Australian Open forever
- Indian rapist murderer of doctor sentenced to life in prison
- Fashion world in flux for men's week in Paris
- Missing US journalist's mother says new Syria leaders 'determined' to find son
- Indian rapist murderer of doctor sentenced to life in prison: judge
- Djokovic row as 'dizzy' Sinner reaches Australian Open quarters
- Low expectations in Beijing ahead of Trump's second coming
- Merciless Swiatek crushes 'lucky loser' Lys to reach Melbourne quarters
- Shelton halts Monfils to set up Australian Open quarter with Sonego
- Bitcoin hits record above $109,000 awaiting Trump
- Israel-Hamas truce holding after first hostage-prisoner swap
- Markets extend global rally as Trump-Xi talks boost sentiment
- Sinner defies dizzy spells to reach Melbourne last eight
- Triumphant Trump set for return to power
- Djokovic row as ailing Sinner beats heat to reach Melbourne quarters
- Sonego ends teenage qualifier Tien's Australian Open fairytale
- Marcos denounces 'woke' sex education bill in Catholic Philippines
- Sinner beats heat and broken net to make Australian Open quarters
- Indonesia launches international carbon exchange
- Djokovic row as Sinner, Swiatek eye Australian Open last eight
- Svitolina hopes Australian Open run brings 'a little light' to Ukraine
- Champions League giants scrap for knockout spots
- India's 'digital arrest' scammers stealing savings
- Mug shot, solitary cell for South Korea's President Yoon
- Trade wars, culture wars, and anti-immigration: Trump's big promises
- Thunder bounce back to down struggling Nets
- Young Chinese turn to AI pets for emotional relief
- Allen outguns Jackson as Bills beat Ravens, Eagles sink Rams
- Champions Cup success perfect Six Nations warm-up - France skipper Dupont
- Yamal symbol of rising Barca aiming for Champions League progress
- Asian markets track Wall St and Europe rally after Trump-Xi talks
- Trial into stabbing spree that sparked UK far-right riots to open
- No sweat, no shake as Svitolina cruises into Melbourne quarters
- Late night tears and hugs for released Palestinian prisoners
- Trump vows to end 'American decline' at inauguration eve rally
- TV host issues on-air apology to Djokovic over 'insulting' comments
- 'No matter the faith': east Ukraine marks Epiphany despite war divide
- Straka shakes off nerves to win US PGA American Express
- New 'oligarchy' under fire as elites descend on Davos
- Amarc Announces Additional Drill Results From the AuRORA Copper-Gold-Silver Deposit Discovery in Collaboration With Freeport at the Joy District, British Columbia
$80 billion in Aramco shares moved to Saudi sovereign fund
Saudi Arabia has moved four percent of Aramco shares worth $80 billion in the world's biggest oil exporter to the kingdom's sovereign wealth fund, authorities said on Sunday.
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Saudi Arabia's de facto ruler, announced the move as part of efforts to recalibrate the oil-dominated economy.
The transfer is also the latest sign that Saudi Arabia wants to open up the oil giant and "crown jewel" of the Saudi economy, the Arab world's largest.
The "transfer of four percent of Aramco shares to the Public Investment Fund (PIF)... is part of the kingdom's long-term strategy to support the restructuring of its economy," the crown prince was quoted as saying by the official Saudi Press Agency.
Crown Prince Mohammed said he wants the investment fund to have one trillion dollars in assets by the end of 2025. The fund, the centrepiece of official moves to end economic reliance on oil, has less than half that amount before this deal.
"The shares will bolster the fund's strong financial position and high credit ratings in the medium term, as the PIF relies on the value of its assets and the returns on its assets under management for its funding strategy," he said.
The crown prince stressed that the Saudi state would remain the dominant Aramco shareholder with a 94 percent stake. Crown Prince Mohammed is also head of the PIF sovereign fund.
Aramco shares finished down by 0.6 percent in trading Sunday after the announcement. But experts said the share switch would strengthen the sovereign fund.
Mazen al-Sudairi, head of Research at Al Rajhi Capital, said it would "give the fund flexibility" if it wants to launch shares on the local or international market.
Ibrahim al-Ghitani, head of energy studies at the Future for Advanced Research and Studies think tank, predicted that it would a "preparatory step" toward an international sale of shares.
- 'Financial reform process' -
The crown prince said in April last year that Aramco was in talks to sell a one percent stake to a foreign energy giant.
"There is a discussion on the acquisition of one percent (of Aramco) by one of the world's leading energy companies, and this will be a very important deal to boost Aramco's sales in that country," the crown prince said at the time.
Aramco previously sold 1.7 percent of its shares on the Saudi bourse in December 2019, generating $29.4 billion in the world's biggest initial public offering.
It raised six billion dollars in Islamic bonds in June last year, so that it could pay dividends to the new shareholders.
But Aramco announced $30.4 billion in profits for the third quarter of 2021, a massive rise from $18.8 billion for the same quarter the previous year, as oil prices took off again.
In December, Aramco said it had signed a $15.5 billion lease agreement for its gas pipeline network with a consortium led by BlackRock Real Estate of the United States and Hassana Investment Company, a Saudi-state-backed investment management firm.
Aramco and its assets were once kept under a vice-like government control, long off-limits to outside investment.
But with the rise of Crown Prince Mohammed, who has been pushing his "Vision 2030" reform programme since 2016, the kingdom has shown readiness to cede some control.
P.A.Mendoza--AT