Saudi Aramco: From Desert Sand to the World's Most Profitable Company
COMPANY DEEP DIVE: Saudi Aramco — $480.6B Revenue 2024 — $106.2B Net Income — 12.7M Barrels/Day — World's Largest Oil Producer
Global Business · Energy · Oil and Gas · Company Story

Saudi Aramco: From Desert Sand to the World's Most Profitable Company

How an American prospecting team struck oil in the Saudi Arabian desert in 1938, how the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia spent four decades reclaiming the company barrel by barrel, and how Aramco became the single most profitable corporation in human history, sitting atop 270 billion barrels of reserves and generating $480.6 billion in annual revenue.

15 min readBy Robert
$480.6B2024 Revenue
$106.2B2024 Net Income
12.7MBarrels/Day Produced
270BProven Oil Reserves (Barrels)
75,118Employees
1933Year Founded

The Discovery That Changed the World

In 1932, Standard Oil of California obtained a 60-year oil concession from King Abdulaziz ibn Saud in exchange for gold and a loan. Geologists were sceptical. The Arabian Peninsula was unmapped desert, scorching heat, and near-zero infrastructure. The deal was considered a long shot by almost everyone involved. Previous prospecting in nearby regions had been discouraging.

On March 3, 1938, after five years of fruitless drilling across multiple sites, a well designated Dammam No. 7 struck commercial quantities of oil in eastern Saudi Arabia. The gusher that followed was unlike anything the American geologists had seen. Subsequent drilling revealed not a single field but an interconnected system of reservoirs of almost incomprehensible scale. The Arabian-American Oil Company, Aramco, was established to manage the concession. What lay beneath the Saudi desert would prove to be the largest concentration of petroleum reserves ever discovered in human history, a geological accident that would reshape the 20th century and every one that followed.

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Nationalisation: Four Decades of Reclamation

The story of Aramco from 1950 to 1980 is the story of Saudi Arabia's gradual and deliberate reclamation of its own natural wealth from foreign ownership. In 1950, King Abdulaziz negotiated a landmark 50-50 profit-sharing agreement with Aramco's American shareholders, a turning point in the history of resource nationalism. In 1972, as a broader wave of nationalisation swept the Middle East and North Africa, the Saudi government acquired a 25% ownership stake. By 1974 that stake reached 60%.

In 1980, full acquisition was completed retroactively from 1976. American engineers remained in technical roles for years, providing continuity of expertise. But the company's identity, mission, and profits were now entirely Saudi. In 1988 the company was renamed Saudi Aramco and formally reconstituted as a national oil company reporting directly to the government. The transformation from foreign-controlled concession to sovereign champion was complete in less than five decades.

"Our strong net income and increased base dividend illustrate Aramco's exceptional resilience and ability to leverage its unique scale and low cost." Amin H. Nasser, President and CEO, Saudi Aramco — Full Year 2024 Results

Revenue and Profitability: Numbers That Dwarf Every Rival

YearRevenue (USD)Net Income (USD)
2017$261 billion$75.9 billion
2019$329 billion$88.2 billion
2020$229 billion$49 billion
2021$400 billion$110 billion
2022$604 billion$161 billion — all-time global record
2023$495 billion$121 billion
2024$480.6 billion$106.2 billion
Aramco's $161 billion net income in 2022 was the largest annual profit ever recorded by any company in history, surpassing Apple's previous record. That single year's profit exceeded the combined annual revenue of Nike, Starbucks, McDonald's, and Ford. The profitability is driven by a production cost estimated at under $3 per barrel, compared to $20-40 for most western oil majors. Even in the lower-price 2024 environment, Aramco's $106.2 billion net income dwarfs the profits of almost every other corporation on Earth.

The Ghawar Field: The Greatest Oil Find in History

At the heart of Aramco's extraordinary position sits the Ghawar field, a geological formation stretching approximately 280 kilometres in length and 30 kilometres in width in eastern Saudi Arabia. Ghawar has been producing oil since 1951 and remains the world's largest onshore oil field by a massive margin, delivering over 3.8 million barrels per day. That figure alone exceeds the total oil production of most OPEC member nations. Despite over 70 years of continuous production, Ghawar's proven reserves remain enormous, with remaining recoverable oil estimated above 70 billion barrels.

The Ghawar field explains why Aramco's economics are fundamentally different from any rival. The oil is shallow, under relatively low pressure, and requires far less extraction infrastructure than shale, deepwater, or tar sands. A lifting cost of under $3 per barrel compares to $40-70 for US shale producers and over $50 for Canadian oil sands. This structural cost advantage makes Aramco profitable at prices where every western competitor is reporting losses, a geological moat that no amount of capital or technology can replicate.

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The World's Largest IPO: $29.4 Billion in December 2019

Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman announced in 2016 that Aramco would list a portion of its shares on a public exchange to raise capital for Saudi Vision 2030, the Kingdom's programme to diversify its economy beyond oil. The announcement sparked enormous global interest. Investment banks competed fiercely for advisory roles. Potential listings in New York, London, Hong Kong, and Tokyo were all evaluated over the subsequent three years.

After years of delays and valuation disputes, Aramco listed 1.5% of its shares on the Tadawul exchange in Riyadh in December 2019, raising $29.4 billion at a valuation of approximately $1.7 trillion. It was the largest IPO in history, surpassing Alibaba's $25 billion debut in 2014. The international listings originally envisioned for New York or London were dropped, partly due to concerns about SEC legal liability and the political complications of listing a sovereign energy company in western markets. Aramco's market cap briefly exceeded $2 trillion in 2022, making it at that moment the most valuable publicly traded company in the world.

Milestones: Nine Decades of Petroleum History

1933
Standard Oil of California signs concession with Saudi Arabia for gold and a loan. Exploration teams deploy to the eastern desert.
1938
Dammam No. 7 strikes commercial oil on March 3. The Arabian-American Oil Company is formally established to manage the concession.
1948
Ghawar field discovered. Drilling confirms it as the world's largest onshore oil field at 280km in length and 30km in width.
1950
Landmark 50-50 profit-sharing deal agreed with the Saudi government, transforming the financial relationship between the Kingdom and its foreign partners.
1973
Arab oil embargo triggered by the Yom Kippur War. Saudi Arabia leads OPEC production cuts. Global oil prices quadruple. The strategic power of Gulf oil is demonstrated to the world.
1980
Saudi government completes 100% ownership of Aramco retroactively from 1976. Full nationalisation achieved after 47 years of the original concession.
1988
Company renamed Saudi Aramco. Headquarters permanently established in Dhahran. Global downstream expansion begins in earnest.
2019
Saudi Aramco IPO on Tadawul raises $29.4 billion, the largest IPO in history. Valuation at listing: $1.7 trillion.
2022
Record net income of $161 billion, the largest annual profit of any company in history. Market cap tops $2 trillion. Acquires 70% of SABIC chemicals for $69 billion.
2024
Revenue $480.6 billion. Net income $106.2 billion. Total 2025 dividends committed at $85.4 billion. Capital investment $53.3 billion. Gas expansion accelerates at Jafurah field.

Global Operations: Where Aramco Operates

Saudi Arabia
Core Upstream
All upstream production. Master Gas System. Ghawar, Safaniya, Shaybah and Manifa fields. Dhahran HQ.
Asia Pacific
Refining and Sales
Refineries in China, Japan, South Korea. Supplies approximately 25% of China's crude oil imports annually.
United States
Motiva Refining
Owns Motiva Enterprises, operator of Port Arthur refinery, the largest in the US at 630,000 barrels/day.
Europe and Beyond
Chemicals and Hydrogen
SABIC chemicals integration across 50+ countries. Blue hydrogen projects targeting European decarbonisation markets.

OPEC, Geopolitics, and Saudi Arabia's Oil Weapon

Aramco does not operate in isolation from geopolitics. Saudi Arabia is the de facto leader of OPEC and has used its enormous swing production capacity as a geopolitical instrument across decades. The 1973 Arab oil embargo, led by Saudi Arabia in response to western support for Israel in the Yom Kippur War, caused a global economic crisis, long fuel queues across Europe and North America, and permanently changed the world's understanding of energy security. The ability to rapidly move production by several million barrels per day in either direction gives Aramco, and by extension Riyadh, a level of leverage over the global economy that no private corporation could ever replicate.

In more recent years, Saudi Arabia led coordinated OPEC+ production cuts through 2023 and 2024 to keep oil prices elevated even as demand softened, directly funding its Vision 2030 diversification programme with the resulting revenue. The same mechanism that makes Aramco the most powerful energy company in history also makes Saudi Arabia's fiscal position entirely dependent on its success.

According to Reuters Energy, Aramco's downstream and chemicals expansion represents the company's most ambitious structural transformation since nationalisation, as it attempts to capture value not just from crude but from the entire hydrocarbon value chain.

Aramco's share price has declined approximately 30% from its 2022 peak, with market cap dropping from over $2 trillion to approximately $1.68 trillion by early 2025. The primary driver is the lower oil price environment of 2024-2025 compared to the 2022 surge. Aramco's dividend commitment of $85.4 billion for 2025 is maintained despite lower prices, placing considerable financial pressure on the Saudi government as the dominant shareholder that depends on those dividends to fund Vision 2030 priorities including NEOM, the Red Sea tourism project, and sports investments.

Vision 2030 and Aramco's Diversification Mandate

Saudi Arabia's Vision 2030 sets an explicit goal of reducing oil revenue dependence from over 70% of government income to below 50% by 2030. Aramco is both the primary funder of this transition and a direct participant in it. The company is investing in downstream chemicals through SABIC, in gas expansion to replace domestic burning of oil for power generation, and in carbon capture and renewable energy to maintain access to increasingly climate-conscious international capital markets.

The Jafurah unconventional gas field is expected to add 2.2 billion standard cubic feet per day by 2030, making Saudi Arabia a significant gas exporter for the first time. Blue hydrogen projects are being developed for European markets seeking to decarbonise heavy industry. Whether Aramco can successfully pivot from pure oil producer to diversified energy and chemicals company while maintaining its enormous dividend commitments is the defining strategic question of the next decade.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Saudi Aramco is majority owned by the Saudi Arabian government, which holds approximately 98.5% of shares. Public shareholders hold the remaining 1.5%, acquired through the 2019 IPO on the Tadawul exchange in Riyadh.
Saudi Aramco reported total revenue of approximately $480.6 billion for full year 2024, a slight decline from $495.1 billion in 2023. Net income was $106.2 billion despite lower crude oil prices.
Saudi Aramco produced approximately 12.7 million barrels of oil equivalent per day in 2024, making it the world's largest oil producer by a wide margin ahead of Russia, Iraq, Iran, and the UAE.
Saudi Aramco completed its IPO on the Tadawul exchange in December 2019, raising $29.4 billion, the largest IPO in history, at a valuation of approximately $1.7 trillion.
Saudi Aramco employs approximately 75,118 full-time employees globally, a remarkably lean workforce for a company generating nearly half a trillion dollars in annual revenue.
Saudi Aramco holds proven crude oil reserves of more than 270 billion barrels, the largest of any company in the world. At current production rates these reserves would last over 50 years without any new discoveries.

What Comes Next?

Aramco's near-term challenge is maintaining its $85.4 billion annual dividend commitment to the Saudi government while navigating a lower oil price environment. Capital investment of $52-58 billion for 2025 must simultaneously fund upstream capacity, Jafurah gas development, SABIC chemicals integration, and energy transition projects.

The longer-term structural question is whether the global energy transition accelerates fast enough to meaningfully erode oil demand before Saudi Arabia has diversified sufficiently to reduce its dependence on Aramco's dividends. If oil demand peaks in the late 2020s as EV adoption accelerates, Aramco's revenue ceiling drops permanently. If demand remains resilient into the 2030s, as many forecasts suggest, Aramco will continue to dominate global energy for decades to come.

Watch: Jafurah gas field development milestones, SABIC chemicals integration performance, OPEC+ production policy through 2025, oil price trajectory, and any announcements of a potential secondary international listing beyond the Tadawul.

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