13/07/2016 05:36 AST

When news broke in January that Saudi Arabia was considering an initial public offering of its state-owned oil company, the first reaction on Wall Street was shock. Then calls began pouring into Dubai — the Middle East’s financial hub — from senior bankers in London and New York.

Investment banks around the world are clamoring to join what promises to be a bonanza, and not just the IPO of Saudi Aramco, which could be valued at upward of $2 trillion. The Kingdom is planning to sell hundreds of state assets to bolster its finances and reduce its dependence on oil. That includes as much as $15 billion of bonds.

Saudi Arabia looks even more promising with investment banking in a global slump and Britain’s vote to exit the European Union set to deter deal-making for months to come. “Saudi Arabia is close to the top, if not at the top, of the agenda for banks,” said Christopher Wheeler, a London-based analyst with Atlantic Equities LLP in London. “Where else is there at the moment?"

Fees paid to banks in the kingdom jumped by almost a third to about $100 million in the first five months of the year, according to New York-based research firm Freeman & Co. While that’s a fraction of what investment banks generate in the US and Europe, the work of diversifying the kingdom’s economy is just getting started.

International banks elbowing for position are adding staff, dispatching top executives to Riyadh and promoting Saudis to senior roles. Among the biggest banks, HSBC Holdings Plc and JPMorgan Chase & Co. appear to have a head start.

HSBC is working on the privatization of the Saudi Stock Exchange and the potential breakup of Saudi Electricity Co., people with knowledge of the matter have said.

Stuart Gulliver, chief executive officer of the London-based bank, travels to the Kingdom regularly to meet decision makers, said a person familiar with his visits who asked not to be identified discussing internal matters.

Influential Roles

Two HSBC bankers recently jumped to government roles. Mohammad Al-Tuwaijri, CEO for the Middle East, was appointed deputy economy and planning minister in May. Fahad Al-Saif, general manager of global banking and markets at HSBC’s Saudi British Bank, is starting a debt management office that will be responsible for the kingdom’s first international bond sale. HSBC and JPMorgan, along with Citigroup Inc., were picked just days ago to arrange that offering, people with knowledge of the matter said. Officials at the three firms declined to comment on their Saudi operations.

JPMorgan advised the Saudi Public Investment Fund on its $3.5 billion investment in Uber Technologies Inc. this month. It also has an advisory role on Aramco, people familiar with the matter said in April. The largest US bank set out at the beginning of the year to increase its Saudi staff of 65 by about 10 percent, said Bader Alamoudi, CEO of its local investment-banking unit, in a January interview.

‘Huge Potential’

Deutsche Bank AG, which has about 80 people in the country, named Jamal Al-Kishi, a Saudi national, as CEO for the Middle East and Africa earlier this year.

“We view Saudi as a core growth market with huge potential for global investment banks,” said Tamim Jabr, Deutsche Bank’s head of corporate and investment-banking coverage in Saudi Arabia.

Morgan Stanley President Colm Kelleher, who traveled to Riyadh in May, told a local publication newspaper that his visit was to reaffirm the bank’s commitment to the Saudi market at a time when the country’s future is being shaped. An official at the New York-based firm declined to comment.

The big banks are vying not just with each other, but also with smaller firms. Verus Partners Ltd., a London-based advisory boutique co-founded by former Citigroup bankers Mark Aplin and Andrew Elliott, helped Saudi Arabia secure its first loan in 15 years in April, when


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