Tired of cheap oil,
Saudis eye price boost to drive Aramco IPO
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[September 01, 2016]
By Rania El Gamal and Alex Lawler
DUBAI/LONDON (Reuters) - Two years
after triggering an oil price war, Saudi Arabia has seemingly had
enough of cheap crude amid budget pressures, fear of a future supply
shortage, and as it seeks to offload a stake in state-owned producer
Aramco.
The change in tone comes as OPEC and other producers such as Russia
may resume talks on stabilizing output when they meet in Algeria
later this month, after a similar effort to boost oil prices
collapsed in April due to Saudi-Iranian tensions.
"The Saudis are going to Algeria for a freeze," said a source in the
Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries who is familiar
with the matter and declined to be identified.
"More and more ministers are now talking among themselves to
evaluate their production position."
OPEC in November 2014 made a landmark policy shift, led by Saudi
Arabia, refusing to cut production by itself in the hope that lower
prices would discourage higher-cost competitors that had eroded the
group's market share.
Further cementing the impression of a production free-for-all, OPEC
ditched its last remaining supply-management tool, an output
ceiling, in December 2015.
From 2014 until earlier this year, Saudi Arabia's then-minister for
oil, Ali al-Naimi, offered little verbal support for prices. The
market determined them, Naimi said, but he gave no preferred range
or any indication of what levels could be sustained in the long
term.
Since Khalid al-Falih took over as energy minister, the tone has
visibly shifted. He says the world needs oil above $50 per barrel to
achieve a balanced market, and raised the prospect of Saudi Arabia
resuming its role of balancing supply and demand.
Outwardly, there is no sign yet of a definite change in policy. But
behind the scenes, Saudi Arabia has been working towards boosting
prices, rather than leaving that job to market forces.
At OPEC's last meeting in June, held in Vienna, Falih surprised some
of his counterparts by proposing OPEC set a new output ceiling,
according to several people familiar with the matter.
PRICE-BOOSTING ACTION AIRED
In Vienna, Falih floated a number of ideas in private meetings on
how best to manage the supply glut, and questioned independent OPEC
analysts during separate meetings as to the possible price impact of
a production freeze or even a cut.
At private talks with the Nigerian oil minister before the June 2
OPEC meeting, Falih was willing to revive the idea of a production
freeze while showing more tolerance towards Iran, which is raising
output post-sanctions, sources said.
"The Saudi minister met with the Nigerian minister and discussed a
ceiling of 32 million barrels per day with flexibility towards
Iran," one source said.
More talks with Iran led by Qatar, which holds the OPEC presidency
in 2016, took place privately but they failed to get Tehran on board
because Iran argued it needed to regain market share lost during
years of Western sanctions, the sources said.
On the day of the OPEC meeting, Gulf members proposed discussing a
ceiling.
"But Iran said no, so the ministers moved quickly to discuss the
secretary-general nomination," the source said. OPEC agreed to
appoint Nigerian Mohammed Barkindo to the position.
ARAMCO VALUATION
Saudi Arabia is by far the largest OPEC producer, pumping more than
twice as much as the second-biggest, Iraq.
Even so, plunging oil prices since mid-2014 have put stress on Saudi
Arabia's finances, causing a big budget deficit last year and
forcing the kingdom to seek new sources of income, including taxes
and other fees and to cut spending.
The government is trying to boost non-oil revenue and modernize the
economy through a reform plan called "Vision 2030", championed by
Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, of which the centerpiece is
the sale of a stake in Saudi Aramco.
[to top of second column] |
Saudi Arabia's Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman attends a
meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping and ahead of the G20
summit, in Beijing, China August 31, 2016. REUTERS/Rolex Dela
Pena/Pool
Sources in the oil industry say this partly explains the shift in tone on
prices.
The Saudis "want higher oil prices for a better Aramco valuation", one industry
source said, adding that some think Aramco could be valued as high as $4
trillion.
Prince Mohammed has said he expects the initial public offering (IPO) to value
Aramco at at least $2 trillion, but that the figure might end up being higher.
Any valuation would account for oil price expectations and the size of Saudi
Arabia’s proven oil reserves.
Another industry source familiar with the matter agreed.
"A stable oil price at a moderate level would help an IPO. I don't know if the
IPO is the major factor – but it's certainly a factor," he said.
"Saudi Arabia does not want to crash the price. Their target indeed would be
somewhere north of $50 - $60 or so."
Saudi officials have also discussed the possibility that too much future supply
could be curtailed by investment cutbacks if prices remain lower for longer, and
are wary of the risk of a price spike, the second industry source said.
Falih has talked about the issue publicly, saying in June that even $50 oil
would not create a rush back to investment.
"There's a real fear," the source said. "So many conventional oil projects are
being canceled."
NOT FLOODING THE MARKET
Saudi production stands near a record high of 10.7 million barrels per day (bpd)
- on a par with Russia and the United States.
But some market insiders have suggested Saudi Arabia cannot afford to push
output any further and sustain it for a long period because despite official
affirmation it can produce as much as 12.5 million bpd if needed, Riyadh has
never really tested such levels.
The change in Saudi tone has been welcomed by OPEC delegates from non-Gulf
nations - many of which privately blame Riyadh for the price crash.
"The Saudis have to play differently. They cannot sell 10 percent of Aramco if
the price of oil is miserable," an OPEC source from a non-Gulf country said.
But despite the behind-the-scenes talks, OPEC delegates and industry sources are
skeptical that the tone shift will be backed with concrete action either by the
Saudis or producers collectively.
"I don't think anything Falih says means they are going to cut production," said
the industry source. "It means Saudi will be cautious in doing things that might
flood the market."
Falih, in an interview with Reuters in August, tempered expectations of any
production cut, saying significant intervention in the market was not necessary.
But he did not dismiss the idea of a production freeze.
"If there is consensus that emerges between now and the Algiers meeting, Saudi
Arabia as always will be a constructive player in these discussions and we will
be willing to participate," he said.
(Editing by Dale Hudson)
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