Tag Archives: Emerging markets

Texas freeze helps rival oil exporters like Saudi Arabia, OPEC members

Pump jacks operate in the Permian Basin in Midland, Texas, U.S, on Saturday, Feb. 13, 2021.

Matthew Busch | Bloomberg | Getty Images

The shock winter storm in Texas that left millions without power and took dozens of lives also froze a major local commodity: the Lone Star state’s oil production, slashing some 4 million barrels per day from U.S. output. 

The consequence will be a boost in revenue and potentially increased exports among rival oil-producing nations, commodities experts say. 

Analysts estimate the total volume of oil lost to Texas’ production freeze at anywhere between 18 million and 40 million barrels and roughly one-fifth of U.S. refining capacity was shut in. And while temperatures are moving upward again and production is expected to mostly recover by the end of this week, the impact of the deficit on oil markets is already visible in the recent jump in crude prices.  

International benchmark Brent crude is up more than $6 per barrel since the storm began hitting Texan production facilities in mid-February. U.S. benchmark West Texas Intermediate has risen about $3 per barrel.  

The development, while adding yet another blow to Texas on top of the devastating damage and human suffering wreaked by the once-in-a-decade storm, translates on the global market into a likely boon for other oil producers, like those in the Middle East.  

“The Texas storm helps Saudi and its partners tremendously because it accelerates the path to inventory normalization,” Peter Sutherland, president of Houston-based energy investment firm Henrietta Resources LLC.  

“Concurrent drawdowns of both crude and refined products are a big tailwind heading into spring,” he told CNBC. “It’s not just positive sentiment; the roughly 40 million barrels lost due to the storm help tighten the market.”

OPEC expected to increase production

The inventory drawdown continues a trend that’s seeing oil prices steadily rise from their historic pandemic-induced lows nearly a year ago. Brent crude is up 30% year to date, with Goldman Sachs predicting it could hit $75 by the end of this year, a level not seen since fall of 2018.  

This could influence decision making among OPEC members in their upcoming meeting on March 4. While the organization had prioritized production cuts during much of the pandemic to keep a floor under oil prices, the more promising outlook for demand — and gradually normalizing global supply — provides incentive for these producers to speed up the rate at which they’ll increase their production.   

“I would certainly expect Saudi Arabia to boost production given the current prices that the market has seen,” said Yousef Alshammari, CEO at oil markets consultancy firm CMarkets.

“Supply disruption in Texas may lead to OPEC+ and Saudi Arabia to raise production by a certain extent and much of that production rise will go to exports at higher prices.” OPEC+ is the loose alliance of 13 OPEC states and 10 non-OPEC oil producing countries.  

Saudi Arabia’s voluntary production cuts of 1 million barrels per day ends in March, and is already expected to start gradually bringing back supply in April. But that also means the kingdom can’t take advantage of higher crude prices by ramping up exports until that production cut period ends. 

Still, “every oil producer, including Saudi Arabia, enjoys the benefit of” the price increase, said Tamas Varga, senior analyst at PVM Oil Associates. “U.S. crude oil exports will fall in coming weeks and this provides support for international grades — again supportive for oil producers.”

‘Very small on a global basis’

Some analysts don’t see the Texas output loss as consequential, even in the medium term. 

The impact of a 4 million barrel daily loss “is very small on a global basis as the world produces over 80 million barrels per day of oil,” Rene Santos, manager for North America supply at S&P Global Platts Analytics, told CNBC.

“Freeze-offs happen in the U.S. every year but of the magnitude that we experienced in the past few days does not happen very often,” he said. “In addition, freeze-offs are short-lived.”

PVM’s Varga agrees. “The situation will likely normalize soon and in the medium-term the impact of the Texas freeze will be negligible, I think,” he said.

But the longer-term market dynamic is still in OPEC members’ favor — not because of Texas’ storm, but thanks to last year’s devastating oil production shut-ins across the U.S. when crude prices crashed. The high cost of U.S. shale production meant most producers couldn’t survive the impact of the lockdowns. U.S. rig count is still 50% below 2019 levels, despite climbing prices. 

“U.S. oil production is not expected to rebound to 2019 levels which will leave OPEC+ with much more influence on the markets in 2021,” Alshammari said. 

Over the long term, the impact from a weather shock like this month’s “really depends on how Texas will deal with such crises in the future,” he added. “I expect them to be more resilient to such adverse weather conditions on the upstream supply side, yet I certainly expect Saudi Arabia to have a bigger market share in the long run due to the lost market share from shale production.”

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Saudi Arabia announces legal reforms paving the way for codified law

Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia Mohammed bin Salman attends the 41st Summit of Gulf Cooperation Council in Al-Ula, Saudi Arabia on January 05, 2021.

Royal Council of Saudi Arabia | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images

Saudi Arabia has announced new judicial reforms, putting the kingdom on a path to codified law — a huge step, considering the deeply conservative country has no codified legal system to accompany the Sharia, or Islamic law, which is currently in place.  

“The Personal Status Law, the Civil Transactions Law, the Penal Code for Discretionary Sanctions, and the Law of Evidence represent a new wave of judicial reforms in the Kingdom,” Saudi state news agency SPA quoted Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman as saying late Monday evening. 

The reforms, the crown prince said, “will help with the prediction of court rulings, the increase of the level of integrity and efficiency of judicial institutions, and will contribute to the increase of the reliability of procedures and control mechanisms.” The new laws are to be announced over the course of 2021, according to his statement.

The news is the latest in a series of dramatic economic and social reforms launched by the 35-year-old crown prince aimed at modernizing the kingdom. It fits into his Vision 2030 agenda which aims to diversify the economy away from oil and attract foreign talent and investment to the kingdom, and comes as Saudi Arabia pitches itself as a destination for international business headquarters.

“This is an important step on the path towards global best practices that give businesses the confidence to invest,” Tarek Fadlallah, Middle East CEO at Nomura Asset Management, told CNBC on Tuesday.

Having no codified legal system often resulted in inconsistency in court rulings and long, drawn-out litigation procedures. The announcement made a specific mention of women in Saudi Arabia, who have long held a lower status to men in terms of legal and economic rights, and who the crown prince described as being particularly harmed by the lack of written laws over certain issues. 

“Discrepancies in court rulings has led to a lack of clarity in the rules governing the incidents and practices, and has hurt many, mostly women,” the SPA quoted Bin Salman as saying.  

Women’s rights in the kingdom — while improved in some areas like driving, employment, and freedom of movement in recent years — are still a major target of criticism by human rights groups and some foreign governments. Several Saudi female driving activists remain in prison and allege they are being tortured, charges the Saudi state denies.  

Ali Shihabi, a Saudi analyst close to the kingdom’s royal court, tweeted about the reforms late Monday, describing the news as “an important step in legal reform and one that recognizes that the Saudi legal system has a way to go to reach international standards and that the leadership appreciates the urgency and importance of such reform.”

“Highlighting its impact on women is particularly interesting,” Shihabi added. 

The crown prince described the current legal system as “painful for many individuals and families, especially women, permitting some to evade their responsibilities. This will not take place again once these laws are promulgated pursuant to legislative laws and procedures,” he said. The statement did not outline further details of what specific practices and penalties would be changed.

His statement added that the forthcoming legal reforms will “will tackle lack of clarity in rules governing… prolonged litigations that are not based on established legal provisions, and absence of a clear legal framework for individuals and businesses.”

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Middle East recovery uneven and dependent on vaccine strategy: IMF

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — The International Monetary Fund has raised its economic outlook for the Middle East and North Africa region’s growth in 2020 by 1.2 percentage points to an overall contraction of 3.8%, showing that despite some progress since the coronavirus pandemic began, it’s still been a brutal year by any account.   

Recovery will be varied and based largely on countries’ investments and strategies for vaccine distribution. But there has been one bright spot for the Gulf states in particular — the lifting of the political and economic blockade of Qatar by other GCC countries, the IMF’s Middle East and Central Asia Director Jihad Azour told CNBC on Wednesday.

While the full details of the reconciliation accord between blockading states — Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, and Egypt — and Qatar are not publicly known, Azour told CNBC’s Hadley Gamble that “any improvement in terms of opening up borders, improving economic relationship will provide an additional potential for growth.”

“Of course, this will improve trade, especially at rates in goods and services,” he added. “It will reduce the cost of procuring for example, for Qatar, it will also help the airlines by reducing the cost. Therefore, there is always benefit from improving economic relationships, especially that we are now entering into a new phase in terms of globalization.” 

A security guard checks temperature of man arriving at a shopping mall in the Saudi capital of Riyadh on May 4, 2020, as malls reopen after authorities began a partial lifting of the lockdown.

Fayez Nureldine | AFP | Getty Images

The news, which saw a dramatic 3 ½-year dispute come to an end, is a likely boon for investment as well, Azour said. “I think this is good for business in the short term, but also in the long term, in terms of providing a bigger space for investors. And this is something that will be valued.”

Qatar’s Financial Centre alone aims to attract $25 billion of foreign direct investment inflows by 2022 as a result of the rapprochement, CNBC reported in January. Airlines, manufacturing and food production are among the other areas that are likely to see major boosts.

Vaccine strategy will be crucial

In the region more broadly, the improvement in outlook was based on “stronger-than-expected performance among oil exporters, as the absence of the second wave in some countries boosted non-oil activity, and the impact of the first wave was lower than expected,” the IMF wrote in its regional outlook report. 

Still, the recovery outlook is patchy and will depend heavily on governments’ vaccine plans. This ranges “from countries with very well-diversified vaccine contracts and production capacity to fragile and conflict-affected states who are largely reliant on COVAX,” Azour wrote in his report. COVAX is a global scheme led by an international vaccine alliance and the WHO, established to ensure equitable vaccine access for every country in the world. 

The disparities are obvious: wealthy Middle Eastern states, like the UAE and Israel, are on track to vaccinate half their populations by March and boast the fastest vaccination campaigns in the world, while poorer countries and territories like Palestine are reliant in large part on COVAX and have not received vaccines for their general population yet. 

“Our analysis is showing that countries who invested heavily in acceleration, accelerating the vaccination will see the recovery moving faster,” Azour said. 

Countries who applied stronger fiscal responses to the Covid-19 crisis “are also expected to have a stronger recovery in 2021, aided by a shallower trough in 2020,” the IMF’s report wrote. 

It added that even though several vaccines are now on the market, the battle is far from over. 

“While vaccines shine a light of hope, the path will be long and winding,” the report said. “In the short term, the main priority remains ensuring that health care systems are adequately resourced, including funding vaccine purchases and distribution.”

 

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