Israel Aerospace prepared for IPO, awaits authorities approval, CEO says


By Steven Scheer

JERUSALEM (Reuters) – State-run Israel Aerospace Industries is prepared for an preliminary public providing in Tel Aviv however awaits the go-ahead from the federal government, IAI chief government Boaz Levy stated on Sunday.

A ministerial privatisation committee in November 2020 had permitted a plan the place Israel may promote as much as 49% of IAI, the nation’s largest defence agency, on the Tel Aviv Inventory Alternate, bringing in billions of shekels.

“We’re transferring in the direction of an IPO,” Levy stated at an investor convention on the TASE. “Prior to now 12 months our enterprise outcomes have continued IAI’s progress development. We’re at present experiencing phenomenal efficiency.”

He stated that in keeping with the federal government’s choice that has already been permitted, there can be an IPO of a minority stake in IAI as quickly because the finance and defence ministries “attain a call that it’s time to do it.”

These ministries declined to remark.

Israeli media have reported that the necessity to attain understanding with IAI’s union, and weak point within the inventory market over the previous two years, had put the IPO on maintain.

IAI produces defence and civilian merchandise together with plane, air and missile defence, unmanned aerial techniques (UAS), floor robotics, precision-guided weapons, munitions, satellites and techniques for area actions.

Over the primary 9 months of 2024, IAI posted report revenue of $416 million, up 74% on the 12 months.

Gross sales rose 13% to $4.4 billion amid an increase within the nation’s multi-front army conflicts, whereas IAI’s backlog of orders grew by greater than $7 billion over the previous 12 months to $25 billion on the finish of September.

It has 156 million shekels ($43 million) price of bonds traded on the TASE.

© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A view of the Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) booth at the Singapore Airshow at Changi Exhibition Centre in Singapore February 20, 2024. REUTERS/Edgar Su/File Photo

In June, IAI paid a dividend of $155 million to Israel’s authorities.

($1 = 3.5995 shekels)

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