Updated
Updated · Bloomberg · Jul 6
Abu Dhabi Delists $81 Billion TAQA After Years Building Its Stock Market
Updated
Updated · Bloomberg · Jul 6

Abu Dhabi Delists $81 Billion TAQA After Years Building Its Stock Market

1 articles · Updated · Bloomberg · Jul 6

Summary

  • $81 billion TAQA is set to be taken private by Abu Dhabi, reversing part of the emirate’s years-long push to expand and deepen its equity market.
  • Abu Dhabi had used blockbuster IPOs of strategic state assets—including businesses tied to its energy sector—to turn its exchange into one of the Gulf’s fastest-growing markets and draw foreign investors.
  • The planned delisting stands out because it removes one of the market’s biggest companies after officials spent years promoting listings as a core capital-markets strategy.
  • The move comes as Gulf dealmaking has surged in the first half of the year, underscoring how state-backed financial strategy still shapes the region’s markets.

Insights

Why is Abu Dhabi delisting its energy giants after spending years building its stock market as a global financial hub?
Could the Gulf's quiet capital retreat from the US trigger the next crisis for America's AI-fueled tech market?
As war forces Gulf nations to invest at home, can this strategy truly secure their economies from escalating regional chaos?