Aramco, ADNOC cutting back on M&A amid decline in oil prices
The Gulf’s largest state-owned oil companies are adapting to lower crude prices in the foreseeable future by cutting back on multibillion-dollar acquisitions and selling assets.
Both Saudi Aramco, the world’s largest petroleum exporter, and Abu Dhabi-based ADNOC have slowed down their M&A activities as they assess what the 16% drop in oil prices this year will mean for their bottom lines, the Financial Times reports.
Over the past three years, Aramco and ADNOC have been the oil industry’s most active dealmakers, announcing more than $60 billion of acquisitions as the two giants expanded into gas, chemicals and lubricants.
With oil prices falling to $67 a barrel this week and analysts predicting continued oversupply in the market, both companies are looking at ways to cut spending and curb their appetites for big acquisitions, the newspaper said.
Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, meanwhile, reported that net profit fell by more than half last year to about $7 billion, reflecting the impact of lower crude prices for the sovereign wealth fund, which owns a 16% stake in Aramco.
The PIF’s income from investment activities, however, gained 38% from the previous year, pushing the fund’s total assets under management above $1 trillion, second among Gulf sovereign wealth funds to the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority.