UAE to float at least quarter of Spain’s Cepsa

Listing of over 25 percent of Spainish oil company set to be decade’s biggest.

MADRID- Abu Dhabi plans to float at least 25 percent of Spain's Cepsa by the end of 2018, the energy company announced Monday, in what would be the largest listing in a decade on the Madrid stock exchange.

Cepsa did not say how much the deal would be worth but market sources said the listing could value the firm, which operates across the entire oil and gas value chain, at around 10 billion euros ($11.6 billion).

Spanish business daily Expansion said the listing, which is subject to market conditions, is set to be the biggest Spain has seen in a decade.

Cepsa has since 2011 been wholly owned by Mubadala, whose vast portfolio also includes stakes in private equity firm Carlyle, telecoms company Etisalat Nigeria and gas firm Emirates LNG.

"We are proud of our partnership with Cepsa, which is a strategic energy investment for Mubadala and a national industrial champion for Spain," said Musabbeh Al Kaabi, head of petroleum at Mubadala.

The planned listing on the Madrid stock exchange is "a natural and strategic fit for Cepsa that will provide wider access to capital markets to support financial flexibility," he added in a statement.

Abu Dhabi's sovereign wealth fund IPIC in 2011 bought the remaining 48.8 percent of Cepsa shares which it did not already own from France's Total for 3.7 billion euros. Last year IPIC merged with Mubadala.

The vast majority of the United Arab Emirates' crude oil reserves are located in Abu Dhabi -- capital of the Gulf emirate.

Cepsa posted a net profit in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) of 441 million euros during the first half of 2018, a 7.0 percent increase over the previous year.