New Saudi mega-city will be listed publicly, crown
prince says
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[October 26, 2017]
By Simon Robinson, Samia
Nakhoul and Stephen Kalin
RIYADH (Reuters) - The $500 billion mega-city planned by Saudi Arabia
will be floated on financial markets alongside oil giant Saudi Aramco as
part of the kingdom's drive to diversify away from oil, the crown prince
told Reuters in an interview late on Wednesday.
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman also said Aramco's initial public
offering is on track for next year and the national oil giant could be
valued at more than $2 trillion - a sum some investors have said appears
unrealistically high.
His surprise announcement about the listing of NEOM, a 26,500-square km
(10,230-square mile) zone that will extend into Jordan and Egypt, is the
latest and most extraordinary in a slate of privatization program led by
the floating of Aramco.
The futuristic high tech hub looks set to become a flagship of reforms
championed by Prince Mohammed to create jobs, encourage entrepreneurs
and permit new freedoms among Saudis steeped in religious puritanism and
dependence on the state.
"The first capitalist city in the world ... this is the unique thing
that will be revolutionary," said Prince Mohammed, heir to the throne of
the largest Arab economy, an absolute monarchy.
"Without a doubt, at the end of the day NEOM will be floated in the
markets. The first zone floated in the public markets. It's as if you
float the city of New York."
The 32-year-old spoke on the sidelines of the Future Investment
Initiative conference, which has attracted nearly 4,000 delegates from
around the world to Riyadh this week.
On Aramco's IPO, he said: "We are on track in 2018... but the listing
(details) are still under discussion ... It will be IPO-ed in 2018."
Switching between English and Arabic, sometimes in the same sentence,
the prince seemed most excited discussing his plans for the new city.
FOCUS ON GROWTH
Adjacent to the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aqaba and near maritime trade
routes that use the Suez Canal, the zone will serve as a gateway to the
proposed King Salman Bridge, which will link Egypt and Saudi Arabia.
NEOM will be fully owned by Saudi Arabia's sovereign Public Investment
Fund (PIF) until its listing, and will attract investments from
companies in renewable energy, biotechnology, advanced manufacturing and
entertainment, the PIF has said.
"It won't be listed in the markets until the idea is mature enough,"
Prince Mohammed said. "It might be after 2030, it might be before, but
the idea and the strategy is to float it eventually."
The new city will not follow the rules and regulations enforced in the
rest of Saudi Arabia, which imposes sharia law based on a strict Wahhabi
interpretation of Islam.
It will offer residents a more liberal lifestyle, allowing musical
concerts and entertainment in a remote corner of the desert kingdom.
Saudi Arabia has already started to relax some long-standing rules,
including what was an effective ban on women driving.
Prince Mohammed said the name mixed "neo", meaning new, with M, the
first letter of the Arabic word for future.
The new city is part of the crown prince's ambitious Vision 2030 plan to
overhaul the economy of Saudi Arabia, OPEC's largest producer, and
provide jobs for an overwhelmingly young population in the face of a
global oil price decline since 2014.
Prince Mohammed has portrayed the reforms as a matter of economic
survival, but one challenge for the ruling Al Saud family has been to
secure the acquiescence of traditionalist clerics upon whose support the
family relies for legitimacy.
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Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman attends the Future Investment
Initiative conference in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia October 24, 2017.
REUTERS/Hamad I Mohammed
Some clergy suspect the bold initiatives conceived by the prince in leisure and
tourism presage sweeping reforms in education, a bastion of conservatism where
clerical control is believed by Western critics to have encouraged Islamist
radicals not just in Saudi Arabia but across the Muslim and Arab worlds.
But the prince has pushed ahead, confident he has the backing of most young
Saudis, who make up the bulk of the population.
"I do think there is a desire within significant parts of Saudi society to move
away from rigid, old-school Wahhabi control of social behavior and the public
sphere," said Steffen Hertog of the London School of Economics."So I don't think
the Crown Prince’s statements are just for show. He genuinely wants to harness
these sentiments and has undertaken very significant steps, including allowing
women to drive and severely curtailing the powers of the religious police."
Economic growth has slowed and the economy may shrink this year as the
government introduces austerity measures.
"The idea is not to restructure the economy as much as to seize the
opportunities available that we didn't address before. We have high capacity and
we use only a little," Prince Mohammed said.
He became next in line for the throne in June after the king, his father,
removed a more senior prince from the succession. He has pledged to transform
Saudi Arabia economically and socially.
"Vision 2030 is about a lot of big opportunities, so Aramco is one of them, NEOM
another opportunity ... We have a lot of huge projects we will announce in the
next few years."
He said PIF would generate higher returns than other big investment funds.
QATAR AND YEMEN
Prince Mohammed also said Saudi Arabia's dispute with neighboring Qatar had not
affected investment.
“Qatar is a very, very, very small issue," he said.
Saudi Arabia and three Arab allies cut diplomatic and transport ties with Qatar
earlier this year over accusations that Doha supported Islamist "terrorists".
Qatar denies the allegations.
Prince Mohammed said the kingdom's war in Yemen would continue in order to
prevent the armed Houthi movement from turning into another "Hezbollah" on Saudi
Arabia's southern border.
"We're pursuing until we can be sure that nothing will happen there like
Hezbollah again, because Yemen is more dangerous than Lebanon," he said.
Hezbollah, armed and backed by Iran, has become a formidable force in Lebanon
and Syria. The Houthis also reportedly receive arms and training from Iran,
Riyadh's arch-rival.
Yemen's location is crucial, said Prince Mohammed. "It's next to Bab al-Mandab
so if something happens there, that means 10 percent of world trade stops," he
added, referring to the strait at the southern end of the Red Sea.
"This is the crisis."
(Additional reporting by Rania El Gamal; editing by William Maclean/Mark
Heinrich)
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