RIYADH / Reuters
Saudi Arabia’s L’azurde Company for Jewellery, which surged on
its trading debut in Riyadh on Wednesday, plans to almost double the number of its branches in the MENA by 2018.
Chief Executive Selim Chidiac told Reuters that market conditions in Saudi Arabia were very challenging as consumers have been hit by the slide in oil prices, but expanding into new countries and increasing market share would help the jewellery maker to keep growing.
“The priority is primarily into the Gulf but there are opportunities for us to go to the wider Middle East and North Africa,”
Chidiac said in an interview. “In the Gulf, there are opportunities I would say primarily in Qatar, the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait,” he said, adding the company was looking to also expand in Egypt, Morocco and Algeria.
L’azurde was the first retail company to list in Riyadh in more than a year and closed at 39.8 riyals on Wednesday, up 7.6 percent from its IPO price, after rising to its daily limit of 10 percent at one point. The company, which raised 477.3 million riyals ($127 mln) from its initial public offering, makes gold and diamond jewellery in Saudi Arabia and Egypt and distributes to wholesale markets in 52 countries, mainly in the Middle East.
Chidiac said the company, which was set up in 1980 in a small workshop in Riyadh and has grown to be one of the leading jewellery companies in the kingdom, aimed to increase its total branch network to 30 shops in the next two years from 16 currently.
The company’s wholesale operations generate 80 percent of revenues but Chidiac said it aims for its retail operations to contribute 30-35 percent of annual revenue within three to five years. It started selling diamond jewellery in 2013 to retail traders in Saudi Arabia and Egypt. Prior to its IPO, the company was majority owned by a consortium led by Investcorp and generated revenue of 2.81 billion riyals and a net profit of 100.6 million riyals in 2015, up 4 and 16 percent year on year respectively.
It is adjusting its product range to account for more cautious consumer spending habits, including using a lower weight of gold in some of its jewellery, Chidiac said. “For example, a wedding set which used to weigh 70 grams, we now produce at 40 grams to offer consumers,” he said.