Thursday 8 July 2021

Why the OPEC+ Crisis Has Sparked an Oil Price Frenzy: QuickTake - Bloomberg

Why the OPEC+ Crisis Has Sparked an Oil Price Frenzy: QuickTake - Bloomberg

A year after rescuing the global oil industry from the ravages of the pandemic, the OPEC+ alliance has been thrown again into disarray. The group of crude producers has split at its core, after a bitter feud flared up between long-standing allies Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates over how quotas should be calculated. Prices have swung as their standoff threatens to deprive markets of the supplies needed to feed the world’s economic recovery. If the deadlock remains unresolved, it could have profound consequences for the balance of power in the Middle East and energy companies around the globe.

1. What is OPEC+ fighting about?

The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its partners have been gradually restoring to the market the vast quantities of crude they halted when the coronavirus crushed fuel demand in 2020. Its plans to revive the barrels that remain offline have run into a snag: the UAE will only approve Saudi proposals to phase in the restart to the end of 2022 if its individual target is recalculated. Abu Dhabi, capital of the UAE and seat of most of its oil production, says the quota is outdated and unfair.

2. What has the pandemic done to OPEC+?

In March 2020, OPEC+ was plunged into a brutal price war as group leaders Saudi Arabia and Russia clashed over whether the pandemic necessitated fresh production cuts. As lockdowns sent the oil market crashing, the group reached a truce and agreed the biggest output curbs in history: roughly 10 million barrels a day, or 10% of world supplies. But while the pandemic provoked a fight in OPEC+ last year as demand slumped, it’s now sparking another as consumption returns.

3. Why is Saudi Arabia’s ally objecting?

Abu Dhabi believes the agreement that OPEC+ hastily struck in April 2020 has an unsustainable inequity. While production baselines used to measure each country’s required cuts were updated for Saudi Arabia and Russia, the other 21 nations were stuck with levels set in 2018. That’s an acute problem for the UAE, which has invested billions of dollars in new production capacity and is keen to make use of it. The country also needs to pump sufficient volumes to ensure the viability of a recently-launched regional price benchmark, Murban. But there’s also a deeper tension between the two Middle East siblings: Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed is determined to carve out an independent political path for Abu Dhabi, stepping out from the shadow of its bigger neighbor.

4. What does it mean for gasoline prices?

U.S. oil futures rallied to a six-year high of almost $77 a barrel on July 6 before retreating again, as traders fear the impasse may prevent OPEC+ from filling a looming supply shortfall. With the holiday driving season under way in the northern hemisphere, global oil markets are forecast to tighten sharply in coming months. That could push gasoline prices -- already above the sensitive threshold of $3 a gallon in the U.S. -- even higher. Yet markets have remained volatile amid the OPEC+ spat as traders weigh another option: that the dispute could ultimately fracture the coalition and usher in a new price war.

5. How could the stalemate be resolved?

OPEC+ delegates say that consultations are going on behind the scenes to bridge the divide after talks failed dramatically on July 5, but so far they’ve yet to yield results. Ultimately, leaders in Riyadh and Abu Dhabi will need to try and find a compromise. That could be expedited by pressure from key consumers: the administration of U.S. President Joe Biden has reached out to the main players and urged them to reconcile. Typically, disputes at OPEC+ are resolved with some creative accounting and a diplomatic fudge that allows the opposing sides to save face.

6. Is this the beginning of the end for the cartel?

OPEC’s obituary has been written numerous times over the past few decades, only for the organization to rise up again. The OPEC+ alliance it formed with non-members had seemed irretrievably broken when the 2020 price war erupted, yet it too is still standing. While the UAE made veiled threats last year about quitting OPEC, analysts widely expect this latest confrontation will be resolved in the coming weeks. But it could foreshadow future conflicts that eventually test the alliance to breaking point. The UAE’s urge to deploy its new production capacity quickly may reflect concern that time is running out for fossil fuels, as the world transitions to low-carbon energy. If the switch to electric vehicles and renewable energy brings global oil demand to a plateau, OPEC+ nations may decide to break from the alliance and pump all they can.

Mubadala's Yahsat garners strong demand at middle of IPO price range-sources | Reuters

Mubadala's Yahsat garners strong demand at middle of IPO price range-sources | Reuters

State investor Mubadala's satellite company Yahsat has garnered strong demand for its initial public offering at the middle of an indicative price range, three sources familiar with the deal said.

A final decision on the IPO price is likely to be taken by Mubadala late on Thursday, they said.

Al Yah Satellite Communications Co (Yahsat) had set an indicative price range of 2.55-3.05 dirhams a share.

If the IPO is priced in the middle of the range, the deal could raise around 2.7 billion dirhams ($735.13 million) based on a maximum share sale of 975.9 million shares.

Oil prices rise after big draw in U.S. crude, gasoline stocks | Reuters

Oil prices rise after big draw in U.S. crude, gasoline stocks | Reuters

Oil prices rose on Thursday, rebounding from early losses after U.S. government data showed a much bigger drop than expected in crude and gasoline inventories.

Still, Brent prices remained about $3 a barrel below Monday’s close, as traders remained worried that global crude supplies might swell following the collapse that day of negotiations between the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and allies including Russia, a group known as OPEC+.

Brent crude oil futures rose 69 cents, or 0.9%, to settle at $74.12 a barrel, and U.S. West Texas Intermediate futures rose 74 cents, or 1%, to settle at $72.94 a barrel.

Early in the session, both contracts fell to their lowest in about three weeks.

U.S. crude inventories fell by 6.9 million barrels last week to 445.5 million barrels, Energy Information Administration data showed. Analysts had expected a 4 million-barrel drop.

#Saudi's AHAB nears end of years long debt dispute | Reuters

Saudi's AHAB nears end of years long debt dispute | Reuters

After more than 12 years of back and forth between the Algosaibi family’s conglomerate AHAB and its creditors, one of Saudi Arabia's largest debt disputes is set to finally reach a resolution.

A debt restructuring proposal was submitted to the Dammam commercial court this week after approval from a creditor committee, Simon Charlton, chief restructuring officer and acting chief executive of AHAB told Reuters on Thursday.

The proposal would see creditors receive 7.25 billion riyals ($1.93 billion) in settlements, corresponding to about 26% of total approved debt claims worth 27.5 billion riyals ($7.33 billion), he said.

A bankruptcy judge is expected to indicate within 60 days a date for a creditor vote, and distributions could follow soon.

"This is clearly in the best interest of creditors, it delivers a much higher return than a hostile liquidation and I am confident creditors will see that and will give a successful vote, and I am hoping we’ll start distributions later this year," Charlton said.

Creditors have been pursuing AHAB and Saad Group, a Saudi conglomerate owned by tycoon Maan al-Sanea, since they defaulted on about $22 billion in combined debt in 2009.

The Algosaibis and Sanea - who married into the Algosaibi family - have been locked in a bitter dispute over who was to blame for the 2009 collapse of the companies.

AHAB's creditor committee includes local, regional, and international banks.

About one third of its debt has been traded for years by banks' trading desks and hedge funds, Charlton said.

Of the 7.25 billion riyals in settlements, 5.2 billion riyals will come from company assets and about 2 billion riyals from the owners.

AHAB filed for a financial restructuring in 2019 under the framework of Saudi Arabia's bankruptcy law, introduced the previous year to make the kingdom more investor friendly.

Before the new law, modern bankruptcy legislation did not exist in Saudi Arabia, meaning the main options for defaults were liquidation or cash injections.

IMF sees #Saudi growth at 2.4% this year with non-oil sector leading rebound | Reuters

IMF sees Saudi growth at 2.4% this year with non-oil sector leading rebound | Reuters

The International Monetary Fund said on Thursday Saudi Arabia's economy is recovering well from the COVID-19 pandemic and the fund expected the non-oil economy to grow by 4.3% this year, with overall GDP growth seen at 2.4%.

Real oil GDP is expected to shrink by 0.4%, the IMF said in a statement, as production is assumed to stay in line with an agreement between the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), Russia and allies, known as OPEC+.

Saudi Arabia, the world's biggest crude exporter, was pummelled by the double blow of last year's historic oil price crash and the COVID-19 pandemic's impact, though the economy showed signs of improvement from late in the year.

Investment by the kingdom's sovereign wealth fund, the Public Investment Fund, is expected to offset government fiscal consolidation's drag on growth, the IMF said. PIF's investments are a central part of the country's economic development programme Vision 2030, which aims to wean the economy off oil.

The IMF's executive directors "underscored the importance of monitoring fiscal risks and developing a robust sovereign asset-liability management framework given the growing role of the Public Investment Fund and public-private partnerships (PPP) in the economy".

The directors also agreed that the Saudi riyal's exchange rate peg to the U.S. dollar "continues to serve the economy well given the current economic structure".

"While fully agreeing with this, many directors also encouraged the authorities to review the peg over the medium term to ensure that it remains appropriate given the plans for economic diversification."

#Dubai developer Emaar Properties expects buyout of retail arm by year-end | Property – Gulf News

Dubai developer Emaar Properties expects buyout of retail arm by year-end | Property – Gulf News

Emaar Properties expects to complete the planned merger with its retail arm Emaar Malls by year-end, adding that progress is being made to get the regulatory clearance from the UAE’s Securities & Commodities Authority.

It was in March this year that the Dubai master-developer confirmed such a plan of action, which would give it considerably more clout in leveraging the potential of Emaar Malls in a future valuation of Emaar Properties.

The statement by Emaar will dispel some doubts that had crept into investors’ minds after the SCA launched a review of another major stock market move – that of Hussain Sajwani owned Maple Invest acquiring the whole of Damac Properties. Maple Invest was offering Dh1.3 a share to investors holding the Damac share.

In March, Emaar Properties had announced that it would swap 0.51 of its own shares for each one of Emaar Malls. The parent company currently owns 85 per cent in the retail arm, which owns the world’s biggest shopping destination, The Dubai Mall.

Adia acquires stake in southeast Asia-focused EdgePoint Infrastructure

Adia acquires stake in southeast Asia-focused EdgePoint Infrastructure

A wholly owned subsidiary of Abu Dhabi Investment Authority (Adia), one of the world's biggest sovereign wealth funds, acquired a significant minority stake in digital infrastructure platform EdgePoint Infrastructure, committing to invest up to $500 million in the company.

EdgePoint is focused on developing, acquiring and operating telecommunication towers, distributed antenna systems and adjacent infrastructure in southeast Asia, Adia said in a statement on Thursday.

Adia will support the future growth of the platform, which is expected to include both acquisitions and the development of new towers, the authority said.

"This agreement with EdgePoint aligns with a number of our key investment themes, including the growth of digital infrastructure and our confidence in the fast-growing markets of Asia," Khadem AlRemeithi, executive director of the real estate and infrastructure department at Adia, said. "We believe this platform can play an important role in increasing both the capacity and coverage of digital services in the region, particularly in Indonesia where recent regulatory changes are encouraging international investors to explore opportunities.”

Adia, which does not disclose its assets, invests on behalf of the Abu Dhabi government and is the fourth-biggest sovereign fund globally – after Norway, China and Kuwait – according to the Sovereign Wealth Fund Institute. Adia holds directly, or through its subsidiaries, investments across various asset classes including equities, fixed income, real estate and private equity.

IMF’s Technical Help in #Oman Will Unlikely Result in Aid Package - Bloomberg

IMF’s Technical Help in Oman Will Unlikely Result in Aid Package - Bloomberg

The International Monetary Fund’s technical assistance for Oman doesn’t come with conditions and isn’t going to lead to any financial assistance, its mission chief to the Gulf country said.

“The medium-term fiscal plan is not a plan with the IMF, it is the authorities’ own plan,” Daniel Kanda told Bloomberg in an interview late Wednesday. “It was pretty much completed by the time we got into the picture, it’s not something that was jointly developed.”

Struggling with the aftermath of lower oil prices and Covid-19, Oman has been seeking ways to tame its budget shortfall and diversify the economy as crude reserves dwindle. As part of an ambitious economic overhaul, it’s cut public spending, slashed government jobs and implemented a value-added tax. It also plans to introduce an income tax -- unheard of in the oil-exporting Gulf region -- which Kanda said would be implemented in the second half of 2022.

The IMF said this week that the sultanate had also asked for technical assistance to develop a program that would help it eliminate its budget deficit over the medium term by diversifying the economy and reducing the government’s reliance on hydrocarbons. The plan is aimed at reducing Oman’s reliance on international borrowing.



European, Middle Eastern & African Stocks - Bloomberg #UAE #Kuwait #Israel #SaudiArabia #Qatar close

European, Middle Eastern & African Stocks - Bloomberg #UAE #Kuwait #Israel #SaudiArabia #Qatar close







Higher Oil Prices Aren’t Enough for #Bahrain, Gulf’s Weakest Link - Bloomberg

Higher Oil Prices Aren’t Enough for Bahrain, Gulf’s Weakest Link - Bloomberg

While most Persian Gulf countries replenish spent coffers with profits from rising oil prices, the region’s smallest economy is still in bailout territory.

Bahrain needs crude prices above $88 a barrel to balance its budget this year, according to the International Monetary Fund, the highest breakeven price in the six-member Gulf Cooperation Council and far above current levels around $75. It’s preparing to tap international debt markets in the coming months to finance a deficit that’s widened in the aftermath of the pandemic and left it lagging neighbors in the world’s top energy-exporting region.

“Ambitious reform is needed to address Bahrain’s large fiscal imbalances and there doesn’t seem to be the political will behind this currently,” said Scott Livermore, chief Middle East economist for Oxford Economics in Dubai. “The general consensus seems to be that Bahrain will need further Gulf backing in the medium term.”


Linked by a causeway to regional heavyweight Saudi Arabia, the tiny island kingdom was bailed out to the tune of $10 billion by wealthier neighbors as recently as 2018 but found itself back in trouble as a program to readjust its fiscal balance with measures such as subsidy cuts and a new value-added tax faltered when Covid-19 hit.

Bahrain’s situation looks particularly dire when compared to Oman, the Gulf’s other weak link. Investors used to demand a premium to hold Omani bonds over Bahraini. That reversed in March as Oman reaps the benefits of an economic overhaul launched last year by its new ruler. It’s also sought IMF help in developing a medium-term plan to guide its borrowing.

Bahrain’s Finance Ministry didn’t respond to a request for comment, but the minister, Sheikh Salman bin Khalifa al Khalifa, told Bloomberg last year that his priority, for now, was to restore economic growth rather than further boost revenue.

“We really want to see the recovery take hold before we take any additional steps in that regard,” he said.

#UAE News: #AbuDhabi Seeks Investors and Long-Term Buyers for Blue Hydrogen - Bloomberg

UAE News: Abu Dhabi Seeks Investors and Long-Term Buyers for Blue Hydrogen - Bloomberg

Abu Dhabi is seeking investors to help build hydrogen-export facilities, as Middle Eastern oil producers step up plans to sell what’s seen as a crucial fuel in the transition to cleaner energy.

Abu Dhabi National Oil Co., which pumps almost all the oil and natural gas in the United Arab Emirates, is in talks with energy companies about them buying equity stakes in the hydrogen projects, according to people familiar with the matter. It also aims to sign long-term supply contracts before pushing ahead with the investments, they said.

The market for hydrogen is tiny today but could be worth as much as $700 billion annually by 2050, according to BloombergNEF.

Projects to export the fuel -- which only emits water vapor when burned -- are likely to cost billions of dollars. But amid a global push to slash greenhouse-gas emissions, Persian Gulf nations such as the UAE and Saudi Arabia are looking to hydrogen to reduce their reliance on oil.

#Saudi Aramco to Sell More Assets in Multi-Billion Dollar Push - Bloomberg

Saudi Aramco to Sell More Assets in Multi-Billion Dollar Push - Bloomberg

The world’s largest oil company, Saudi Aramco, is planning to raise tens of billions of dollars by selling more stakes in its businesses.

The Saudi Arabian state-controlled firm created a new team to review its assets last year, soon after the coronavirus pandemic triggered a plunge in energy prices and strained its balance sheet. Aramco raised $12.4 billion by selling leasing rights over oil pipelines to a U.S.-led group of investors in April.

The sales will continue in the next few years, according to Abdulaziz Al Gudaimi, senior vice president for corporate development.

They will happen “irrespective of any market conditions” and Aramco aims to generate “double-digit billions of dollars,” Al Gudaimi said in an interview. “It’s a strategy meant to create value and create efficiency, it’s not about a specific capital target or financing the dividends of the company.”

Oil prices extend losses as OPEC+ uncertainty lingers | Reuters

Oil prices extend losses as OPEC+ uncertainty lingers | Reuters

Oil prices fell for a third day on Thursday amid uncertainty over supply after the collapse this week of talks among major producers which could potentially cause the current output agreement to be abandoned.

Brent crude oil futures slipped by 23 cents, or 0.3%, to $73.20 a barrel by 0644GMT, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate futures were down 33 cents, or 0.5%, at $71.87 a barrel.

Brent prices have fallen about 5% since Monday's close after talks between the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies, including Russia, known as OPEC+, fell apart when de facto leader Saudi Arabia refused demands from the United Arab Emirates to raise its output under the group's supply cut agreement.

"The oil market is looking beyond the oil supply deficit in August and expecting the OPEC+ agreement to fall apart well before April 2022 when the agreement expires as other member countries will ask for further concessions to secure more market share," said Edward Moya, senior market analyst at OANDA.

#Saudi-#UAE still at impasse as #Russia steps in to rescue OPEC+ deal | Reuters

Saudi-UAE still at impasse as Russia steps in to rescue OPEC+ deal | Reuters

Russia is leading efforts to close divisions between Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates to help strike a deal to raise oil output in coming months, three OPEC+ sources said, with OPEC and its allies yet to set a date for their next oil policy meeting.

Disagreement between the two Gulf OPEC allies was publicly exposed last week, with Riyadh and Abu Dhabi at odds over a proposed deal that would have brought more oil to the market -- potentially cooling a rally that has seen prices hit 2-1/2 year highs.

The rare spat forced the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), Russia and other producers, a group known as OPEC+, to abandon talks on boosting production after days of negotiations. read more

The producers have said they will decide on a date for a new meeting in due course, giving no signal whether any compromise might be possible in the coming days.

MIDEAST STOCKS #Saudi index falls in early trade; IHC supports #AbuDhabi | Reuters

MIDEAST STOCKS Saudi index falls in early trade; IHC supports Abu Dhabi | Reuters

Saudi Arabian shares eased in early trade on Thursday, mirroring a decline in oil prices, while the Abu Dhabi index saw some support from International Holding (IHC).

Brent crude oil futures slipped by 23 cents, or 0.3%, to $73.20 a barrel by 0644 GMT, amid uncertainty over supply after the collapse of talks this week among major producers which could potentially cause the current output agreement to be abandoned.

The benchmark index (.TASI) in Saudi Arabia was down 0.3%, with Al Rajhi Bank (1120.SE) and the kingdom's largest lender Saudi National Bank (1180.SE) losing 0.9% each.

The movement in oil prices is a key catalyst for the Gulf region's financial markets.

Russia is leading efforts to close divisions between Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates to help strike a deal to raise oil output in coming months, Reuters reported, citing three OPEC+ sources. read more

The UAE on Friday accepted a proposal from Saudi Arabia to raise output in stages by about 2 million barrels per day from August to December 2021, but rejected an extension of cuts beyond April 2022, when the current agreement expires, without adjusting its baseline production - the level from which any cuts are calculated.

In Abu Dhabi, the index (.ADI) added 0.2%, with conglomerate International Holding (IHC.AD) gaining 1%, on track to extend gains for a ninth consecutive session.

The winning streak started with the listing of its unit Alpha Dhabi (ALPHADHABI.AD) last week, in which IHC holds a 45% stake. read more

IHC, which operates in a range of sectors including healthcare and agriculture, has gone through rapid expansion across its major business sectors, resulting in sharp growth in its financials.

Dubai's main share index (.DFMGI) eased 0.1%, pressured by a 1.3% fall in logistic firm Aramex (ARMX.DU).

The Qatari benchmark (.QSI) edged up 0.1%, helped by a 1.2% rise in Qatar Gas Transport (QGTS.QA).