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Saudi Arabia might play hardball with OPEC - here's why

Published 09/14/2016, 10:04 PM
Updated 09/15/2016, 04:28 AM
© Reuters/Ali Jarekji, A man holds a 50 riyal ($13.3) note, which shows the Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem old city and Saudi's King Abdullah, in Riyadh.

Recent developments in the OPEC universe have fueled speculation that oil producers might actually be able to agree on something at the informal talks in Algiers, Algeria, set for September 26-28.

Most notably, Saudi Arabia and Russia agreed at the G-20 summit in China last week to cooperate on oil and create a "working group" to stabilize markets — a move some analysts considered to be "another indicator of the extreme economic duress that producers are enduring."

And on the following day, Iran gingerly offered some support for an oil-production freeze — though it did not actually agree to join one.

But some, however, have argued that there remain several reasons the Saudis might ultimately be opposed to any tangible agreement.

"The slowdown in Saudi Arabia's economy has prompted the authorities to soften their opposition to a deal to freeze oil output," Jason Tuvey, the Middle East economist at Capital Economics, wrote in a note to clients.

But "while a deal is more likely than it was earlier this year, there are several reasons, including ongoing tensions with Iran, to think that the Kingdom will be hesitant to sign up."

Chief among them:

  1. The kingdom would need to see oil prices increase to about $70 a barrel for any real improvement in its fiscal position, Tuvey said. In other words, a production freeze alone might not be alluring enough.
  2. The Saudis haven't capitulated to the wishes of other (struggling) oil producers to do anything about the lower prices for almost two years. And if they do so now, it could "be an enormous loss of face for policymakers," Tuvey argued. Plus, "shifting tack on oil policy would be an outright admission that the strategy to squeeze out high-cost producers has failed and would severely undermine the credibility of the government's diversification efforts," such as the Vision 2030 plan.
  3. And perhaps most obvious: the ongoing geopolitical tensions with Iran.

For what it's worth, Khalid al-Falih, Saudi Arabia's oil minister, dismissed the need for a production freeze last Monday, leading analysts to wonder whether the Saudi-Russian agreement on oil cooperation would amount to anything.

Plus, the director for international affairs at the state-run National Iranian Oil Co., Mohsen Ghamsari, said last Wednesday that Iran would be ready to decide on capping production only after its output hit pre-sanctions levels, which would amount to just over 4 million barrels a day, according to Bloomberg. It now produces about 3.8 million barrels a day.

(It's worth noting that Iran's prior hard stance against any production freeze ultimately ended up being a major reason for Saudi Arabia's bailing on the meeting in Doha, Qatar, back in April.)

"While recent rhetoric suggests a freeze deal has a fighting chance, on-the-ground realities make this outcome far from certain in light of worsening geopolitical tensions within OPEC, too many members production below current and/or aspirational capacity, and demand concerns if prices are driven too high, too fast," a Macquarie Research team led by Vikas Dwivedi argued last week.

"Even if a 'freeze' truly materializes, it will provide little fundamental impact," Dwivedi added. "From a longer-term perspective, core OPEC and non-OPEC producers are eyeing $50+ levels to enable future growth."

"Thus, instead of a meaningful rapprochement among key producers, a 'freeze' may merely represent an opportunity to 'reload' only to resume oil market hostilities."

Prices for Brent crude oil, the international benchmark, are up by 0.3% at $47.20 a barrel as of 10:37 a.m. ET.

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