Al-Jazeerah History
Archives
Mission & Name
Conflict Terminology
Editorials
Gaza Holocaust
Gulf War
Isdood
Islam
News
News Photos
Opinion
Editorials
US Foreign Policy (Dr. El-Najjar's Articles)
www.aljazeerah.info
|
|
Oil Market Showdown: Can Russia Outlast The
Saudis?
By Dalan McEndree
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, October 20, 2015
|
|
|
|
"Two men enter, one man leaves, two men enter, one man leaves, two men
enter..."
Mad Max: Beyond Thunderdome
November 27, oil consuming
countries will celebrate the first anniversary of the Saudi decision to
let market forces determine prices. This decision set crude prices on a
downward path. Subsequently, to defend market share, the Saudis increased
production, which exacerbated market oversupply and further pressured
prices.
While the sharp decline in crude prices has saved crude
consuming nations hundreds of billions of dollars, the loss in revenues
has caused crude exporting countries intense economic and financial pain.
Their suffering has led some to call for a change in strategy to "balance"
the market and boost prices. Venezuela, an OPEC member, has even proposed
an emergency summit meeting.
In practice, the call for a change is
a call for Saudi Arabia and Russia, the two dominant global crude
exporters, which each daily export over seven-plus mmbbls (including
condensates and NGLs) and which each see the other as the key to any
"balancing" moves, to bear the brunt of any production cuts.
Both,
it would seem, have incentive to do so, as each has lost over $100 billion
in crude revenues in 2015—and Russia bears the extra burden of U.S. and EU
Ukraine-related economic and financial sanctions. Yet, while both publicly
profess willingness to discuss market conditions, neither has shown any
real inclination to reduce output—in fact, both countries seem committed
to keeping their feet pressed to their crude output pedals. In the course
of 2015, both have raised output and exports over 2014 levels—Saudi Arabia
by ~500 and 550~ mbbls/day respectively and Russia by ~100 and ~150. The
Saudis have repeatedly cut pricing to undercut competitors to maintain
market share in the critical U.S. and China markets, while the Russian
Finance Ministry recently backed away from a tax proposal which Russian
crude producers said would reduce their output.
This apparent
bravado notwithstanding, the two countries' entry into the low-price
Crudedome is ravaging their economies. Should crude prices decline from
current levels, or even just stagnate, it is possible neither country will
exit the CrudeDomeunder its own power.
IMF WEO Data: Recessions as
far as the Eyes can See
Both Saudi Arabia and Russia paint
positive portraits on current and future economic performance. At a
conference in Moscow on October 14, President Putin
said that Russia had reached if not passed the peak of its economic
crisis and predicted economic growth in coming years.
Arab News
announced in the first paragraph of its report on Q2 Saudi economic
performance that Q2 GDP grew 3.79 percent year-over-year, up from 2.3
percent growth in Q1.
Yet IMF October 2015 and April 2015 World
Economic Outlook projections for the Russian and Saudi economies a paint
pessimistic portrait, as the following three tables, forecasting GDP
through 2020 in current prices/national currency, constant prices/national
currency, and current prices/US$ show (all data in billions).
- In
each of the data series, except the April and October ones, Russian
current prices/national currency and the Saudi constant prices/national
currency series, GDP declines from 2014 to 2015. (When adjusted for
estimated inflation, however, the forecasts for Russian GDP current
prices/national currency show GDP declining from 2014 levels—to 64,039
billion Rubles given inflation of 17.943 percent in the April series; in
the October series, to 64,463 billion rubles, given inflation of 15.789
percent. The growth shown in the Saudi constant prices/national currency
series results from the reduction in the deflator, which the Saudi
National Statistical Office, Central Department of Statistics and
Information uses to convert current national currency GDP into constant
national currency. For example, decreasing the deflator from 115.073 to
94.234 in the October series and to 97.066 from 115.889 in the April
series turns a decrease in GDP in current prices into an increase in GDP
in constant prices).
- Between the April and the October forecasts
in most of the data series, GDP deteriorates (blue font). Crude prices
bear much of the responsibility: the April forecasts were based on $58.14
and $65.65 per barrel oil in 2015 and 2016 respectively, while the October
projections are based $51.62 and $50.36 respectively.
- The year
in which GDP exceeds 2014 GDP is noted in red font. As a result of the
deterioration in GDP forecasts between April and October in the Saudi
current prices/national currency series, GDP does not exceed 2014 GDP
until 2018 instead of 2017; in the Russian current prices, US$ series, GDP
exceeds 2014 level after 2020 instead of 2019; in the Saudi current
prices/US$, the recovery is pushed to 2018 from 2017. (In inflation
adjusted terms, Russian GDP in current prices, national currency would be
below 2015 levels in 2020).
(Click Image To Enlarge)
Image URL:
http://cdn.oilprice.com/images/tinymce/ada3401a-min.jpg
Larger Image URL:
https://oilprice.com/images/tinymce/ada3401-min.jpg
In Russia, the impact of low crude revenues on GDP has raised
questions about Russia's long term economic prospects. Some see Russia's
economic growth potential as 1 percent annually or less due to low energy
prices, low productivity levels, and a shrinking population, while Alexei
Kudrin, finance minister from 2001 to 2011, recently commented that
Russia's growth model for the last fifteen years—using income from energy
exports to drive up wages, domestic demand and therefore growth—will no
longer work. With the government strapped for funds, and energy income no
longer supporting domestic demand, some see investment as the sole
possible driver of growth.
IMF WEO Data: Budget Deficits as far as
the Eyes can See
Both the Saudi and Russian governments depend on
energy revenues to fund their budgets—oil funds ~90 percent of the Saudi
budget and oil and natural gas ~52 percent of the Russian budget. With the
decline in prices, the Saudi budget anticipates a deficit of 20 percent of
GDP in 2015 and the Russian budget a deficit of 3.3 percent of GDP. The
April and October WEO budget projections in national currencies (Rubles
and Riyals) show the deficits decreasing, but continuing through 2020 for
both countries:
(Click Image To Enlarge)
Image
URL:
http://cdn.oilprice.com/images/tinymce/ada3402a-min.jpg Larger
Image URL:
https://oilprice.com/images/tinymce/Evan1/ada3402-min.jpg
The
following table shows that as a percentage of GDP, the deficits decline
steadily through 2020. However, as a percentage of GDP, the WEO October
projections show the Saudi deficits remain double-digit through 2020—the
potential impact of which will be discussed in the section on currencies.
(Click Image To Enlarge)
Image URL:
http://cdn.oilprice.com/images/tinymce/ada3404a-min.jpg
Larger Image URL:
https://oilprice.com/images/tinymce/ada3404-min.jpg
As planning for the 2016 fiscal year proceeds, fiscal reality is
forcing both governments to scramble for new sources of revenues and/or
opportunities to cut spending to reduce their budget deficits. The Russian
government suspended the budget rule using a long term average of crude
prices to set spending, since the resulting $80 average price would have
dictated unreasonable spending in 2016.
President Putin ordered a
10 percent cut in Interior Ministry personnel, imposed a one million
headcount ceiling on this ministry, and planned cuts in Kremlin headcount.
The Finance Ministry sought a change in the mineral extraction tax formula
to generate an additional 609 billion rubles in 2015 and 1.6 trillion
through 2018, but pressure from the Economic and Energy Ministries and
Russian producers forced the Finance Ministry to
consider alternatives with less negative impact on crude production.
In addition, the government reportedly is taking some $13 billion from
national pension funds, while the Russian Central Bank is preparing
proposals on government pension guarantees that would shift some pension
funding burden from the government budget to companies and individuals.
The Saudi government is also scrambling. After an eight year
hiatus from issuing sovereign debt, the Saudi government announced a plan
during the summer to borrow $28 billion in 2015 and launched the borrowing
with a $5 billion offering in August. The Ministry of Finance has banned
contracts for new projects, hiring and promotions, and purchase of
vehicles or furniture in the fourth quarter, while the newly created
Council for Economic and Development Affairs must now approve all
government projects worth more than $27 million. The Saudi government also
is preparing to privatize airports and contemplating seeking private
financing for infrastructure projects.
The budget situation puts
the Saudi government in a difficult situation. On the one hand, the size
of the deficits requires drastic cuts in spending, but such drastic cuts
would impact politically sensitive areas such as energy subsidies,
government employment opportunities for Saudi citizens, education, and
economic development projects. On the other hand, depleting Saudi
government reserves to finance the deficits will put the Saudi sovereign
credit rating at risk, which would raise the cost of borrowing as well as
pressure the Saudi currency (the consequences of which are discussed
below).
IMF WEO Data: Lagging Per Capita Income as far as the Eyes
can See
In both Russia and Saudi Arabia, the governments have
attempted to shield their citizens from job cuts. In Russia, the
government has discouraged businesses from shedding employees, while the
Saudi government has maintained headcount in the government and
government-related bodies, where most Saudis nationals are employed.
In terms of income, however, the situation is different. IMF WEO
projections show per capita income in 2015 declining from 2014 levels in
both Russia and Saudi Arabia, and only slowly recovering (the year
exceeding 2014 levels in red font). (The increases in per capita income in
the Russia current prices, national currency and in the Saudi constant
prices, national currency series results from the same factors discussed
in the section on GDP).
(Click Image To Enlarge)
Image URL:
http://cdn.oilprice.com/images/tinymce/ada3403a-min.jpg
Larger Image URL:
https://oilprice.com/images/tinymce/ada3403-min.jpg
Impact on Currencies
The steep decline in crude prices has
pressured both currencies. The Ruble has suffered two curses. First, it
has declined substantially relative to "hard" currencies, such as the US$,
the Euro, British Pound, and the Swiss Franc. Against the U.S. dollar, it
depreciated ~29 percent from November 27, 2014 to October 13, 2015
(48.58/US$, to 62.77). Second, it has been and continues to be highly
volatile, its fate tied to moves in crude prices. The Ruble reached its
post-November 27 low on June 27 (33.73/US$) and twice reached its high of
~70/US$ (January 30 69.47, August 24 70.89). A chart is available on
Bloomberg.
The pressure on the Ruble forced the Russian Central Bank to take a
series of emergency measures. At the end of last year, it spent ~$100
billion from its foreign currency reserves to defend the Ruble (it finally
abandoned the defense when it proved futile and allowed the Ruble to
float). In the same period, it extended emergency "hard" currency funding
to major Russian banks and businesses with "hard" currency obligations
that were coming due at the end of 2014. The Central Bank also sharply
raised interest rates—to 17 percent at one point—and has kept the rates
high to defend the Ruble (currently ~11 percent). Two examples illustrate
the impact of Ruble devaluation:
- Transaero, until recently
Russia's second largest passenger airline, attributed being forced into
bankruptcy to high interest rates and a devalued Ruble—the former raised
the cost of financing, the latter pushed up prices in Rubles and therefore
reduced demand in Russia for international flights and increased the cost,
in Rubles, of repaying foreign currency denominated loans and interest.
- The Association of European Businesses in Russia recently
announced that sales of new cars and light commercial vehicles
contracted 29 percent in August year-over-year and forecast a 37 percent
decline for all of 2015. It cited price increases that the car
manufactures were forced to take to cover the increased cost of foreign
parts and systems used in domestic auto manufacturing.
Volatility
is equally pernicious. As another Bloomberg article
points out, Russian businesses, unsure of what the value of the Ruble
will be long term or even day-to-day, are deferring investment despite
generating substantial (Ruble) profits—the very investment which some
believe the Russian economy
needs to grow and which has been contracting for 20 months.
The Saudis have avoided both Riyal depreciation and volatility. The
government has insisted it will keep the Riyal pegged at 3.75/US$ and
financial markets thus far have taken comfort from Saudi reserves
(estimated to exceed $660 billion). However, as deficits deplete reserves
and events occur that threaten the peg and Saudi oil-related export
revenues, this comfort quickly could dissipate. After the Chinese Central
Bank unexpectedly devalued the Yuan by ~2 percent against the US$, bets
that the Saudis would be forced to abandon the peg spiked.
Breaking the peg would devastate the Saudi economy. It would drive up the
cost of imports—and Saudi Arabia depends substantially on imports for a
wide variety and high percentage of necessary consumer, business, and
government goods and services—from food to oil, petrochemical, and other
industrial equipment and services to military equipment, supplies, and
training. It would also harm the Saudis who recently have been increasing
their exposure to "hard" currency denominated loans.
Sovereign
Wealth and Foreign Currency Reserves
Both the Saudis and the
Russians are drawing down reserves they accumulated during the
$100-plus/barrel crude price era to finance their spending. Over the nine
months to July 2015, Saudi reserves declined $76 billion, from $737
billion to $661 billion, implying an annual rate of $100 to $130 billion.
Should large withdrawals continue, or the amounts increase, confidence in
the Riyal will sink.
Besides the $100 billion the Central Bank
spent defending the Ruble, the Russian government has used funds from its
sovereign wealth funds (the National Welfare Fund and the Reserve Fund) to
reduce to fund priority projects, particularly in the energy industry—Rosneft
sought one
of the largest amounts. In June,
Stratfor put the draw on the sovereign wealth funds at $44 billion.
China: The Sword of Damocles
In an era of low crude
prices, modest economic growth, and modest crude demand growth, both Saudi
Arabia and Russia (and other crude exporters) look to China as a source of
incremental revenue to make up for the massive absolute declines in
revenue and are prepared to compete intensely for market share.
One can imagine, then, the panic in Riyadh and Moscow when they
contemplated the implications of the Chinese Central Bank's decision to
devalue the Yuan by ~2 percent against the U.S. dollar and the possibility
this was the first salvo in a series of devaluations.
- For the
Saudis, devaluation, if continued, will force the government to decide
between volume and revenue. Pegged to the US$, Saudi crude, priced in US$
will become more expensive for the Chinese. It will reduce demand for
Saudi crude and/or make the crude of other exporters—e.g. the
Russians—whose currencies float. Yet reducing the US$ price to support
volumes to China will reduce crude export revenues, which, if sufficiently
substantial, could undermine confidence in the Saudi economy and therefore
the Riyal peg to the US$.
- For the Russians, the Chinese Central
Bank announcement possibly produced excitement at the prospect of
competitive advantage over the Saudis in pricing. Quickly, however,
excitement may have turned into anxiety. Neither side has made public
critical details—including the currency or currencies in which sales will
be settled and priced—of three bilateral energy megadeals: Rosneft's $270
billion 2013 agreement to supply 300,000 mbbl/day annually to China for 25
years; the $400 billion, 30 year agreement signed in 2014 to supply
natural gas to China from Eastern Siberia; and the negotiations underway
to supply natural gas from Western Siberia.
Are prices set in US$,
Rubles, Yuan, a basket of currencies (US$, Euro, Swiss Franc)? Are the
Chinese expected to pay in Yuan at the Yuan/Ruble exchange rate? In Rubles
at the Ruble/Yuan exchange rate? In Yuan at the Yuan/US$ exchange rate?
Each alternative has different implications for Rosneft's and Gazprom's
gross and net revenues from the sale of crude (Rosneft) and natural gas
(Gazprom).
And the Winner is...
Despite the intense pain
they are suffering in the low price Crudedome, both the Russian and Saudi
governments profess for public consumption that they are committed to
their volume and market share policies.
This observer believes the
two countries cannot long withstand the pain they have brought upon
themselves—and this article only scratches the surface of the negative
impact of low crude prices on their economies. They have, in effect,
turned no pain no gain into intense pain no gain and set in motion the
possibility neither will exit the low price Crudedome under its own power.
Article Source:
http://oilprice.com/Energy/Oil-Prices/Oil-Market-Showdown-Can-Russia-Outlast-The-Saudis.html
***
Share this article with your facebook friends
|
|
|