Norwegian government targets June 18 for Statoil IPO

May 14, 2001
The Norwegian government has set June 18 for the launch of its partial initial public offering for listing Statoil AS, the state-owned oil company, on the Oslo and New York stock exchanges. The Norwegian government plans to float between 15-25% of Statoil through the IPO, a percentage that could rise to 33% via partnership agreements.


By the OGJ Online Staff

HOUSTON, May 14 -- The Norwegian government has set June 18 for the launch of its partial initial public offering for listing Statoil AS, the state-owned oil company, on the Oslo and New York stock exchanges.

Some analysts have calculated Statoil's market value at up to $22 billion. Financial advisors are promoting premarketing of shares in Statoil. Those advisors are UBS Warburg AG, Morgan Stanley Dean Witter & Co., and Norwegian brokerage house DnB Markets AS.

Last month, the Norwegian parliament voted to sell up to 33% of Statoil through a stock offering (OGJ Online, Apr. 26, 2001). The Norwegian Ministry of Petroleum has sold 15% of the state's direct financial interest in offshore oil and gas exploration licenses to Statoil for 38.6 billion kroner ($4.2 billion) in advance of the IPO (OGJ Online, May 4, 2001).

The Norwegian government aims to float between 15-25% of Statoil through the IPO, a percentage that could rise to 33% via partnership agreements. The state will retain the remaining two-thirds stake in the company.