Bloomberg: Saudi oil cuts throw last year’s standout economy into slow lane
Saudi Arabia’s decision to extend its oil production cuts — part of a so far largely unsuccessful bid to raise prices — may trigger an economic contraction in what was the Group of 20’s fastest-growing country last year.
It would be a stark turnaround for the $1 trillion economy, which surged almost 9 per cent in 2022, helping Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman invest tens of billions of dollars in everything from sports to tourism and new cities, Bloomberg reports.
The boom was propelled by record crude output of around 10.5 million barrels a day and prices averaging $100 a barrel as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine roiled energy markets.
With a global economic slowdown now weighing on crude demand, Riyadh is lowering output this month and next to just 9 million barrels a day, a level the kingdom’s rarely reached in the past decade. The move has lifted prices, but only slightly. Brent is trading around $78.50 a barrel, down almost 9 per cent this year.
The slashing of supply will be a drag on the world’s biggest oil exporter. The economy will fall by 0.1 per cent this year if the government raises production in September and by 1 per cent if it holds the course for the rest of 2023, according to Bloomberg Economics.
“The Saudi cut could be costly,” said Jean-Michel Saliba, Middle East and North Africa economist at Bank of America Corp.
The US lender’s base case is a slowdown in growth to 0.9 per cent. But it forecasts a contraction of 0.6 per cent if the supply reductions aren’t reversed this year. A drop of that level would make Saudi Arabia the worst-performing economy in the G20 after Argentina, according to Bloomberg surveys.
Non-Oil Growth
Some analysts are optimistic gross domestic product can grow even if the cuts stay in place until 2024. Oxford Economics’ Amy McAlister sees GDP rising 0.3 per cent in that scenario.
And the non-oil economy — where the vast bulk of Saudis are employed and which the crown prince’s Vision 2030 plan is aimed at transforming — remains buoyant. Private companies outside the oil industry boosted their orders at the fastest rate on record in June, according to a purchasing managers’ index.
“This is the sector that really matters for job creation and corporate profits,” said Ziad Daoud, chief emerging-markets economist at Bloomberg Economics.
The government says the non-oil economy will probably expand 5.8 per cent this year.
“Saudi economic transformation and diversification under Vision 2030 are focused on the non-oil GDP,” a spokesperson at the Saudi Finance Ministry said.
Still, the slide in petrodollars has edged the kingdom’s budget into a deficit and could force it to borrow more.
There are already some signals of that. The government has sold $16 billion of Eurobonds so far this year, despite interest rates rising as the US and other central banks battle inflation. While Saudi officials have said that’s partly been to refinance existing debt, it’s more than what the kingdom issued in 2021 and 2022 combined, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Below the Breakeven
Many energy analysts, as well as Saudi Arabia itself, expect the oil market to tighten over the rest of 2023 as demand in China and India grows. In such a scenario, prices would likely pick up. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. sees crude jumping to $86 a barrel by December.
For now, prices are well below what Saudi Arabia needs to balance its books. The International Monetary Fund, in its latest projection, put this year’s breakeven oil price at nearly $81 a barrel.
That, though, is based on production of 10.5 million barrels a day. It also excludes spending by the sovereign wealth fund and other state entities on Prince Mohammed’s so-called giga-projects, including the new city of Neom. The breakeven climbs to almost $100 a barrel when that’s taken into account, Bloomberg Economics says.
Oil flows remain crucial to Saudi Arabia, despite all its diversification efforts since Vision 2030 started in 2016. The commodity made up 80 per cent of exports in 2022. The figure is 93 per cent when chemicals and plastics, mostly derived from crude, are included, according to Daoud of Bloomberg Economics.
“Judging by the performance over the last seven years, progress in this area is still lacking,” he said of the economy’s diversification.