世界石油


(彭博社)国际货币基金组织预计 OPEC 及其合作伙伴将从 7 月份开始逐步增加石油产量,这一转变将使沙特阿拉伯明年重新跻身世界增长最快经济体行列。

贷款机构驻沙特代表团团长阿明·马蒂 (Amine Mati) 在华盛顿接受采访时表示,“我们假设 2025 年初会全面逆转削减开支。”国际货币基金组织和世界银行正在华盛顿举行会议。春季会议。

这种观点解释了为什么国际货币基金组织对沙特阿拉伯变得更加乐观,去年沙特阿拉伯的经济出现收缩,因为它与俄罗斯一起领导欧佩克+联盟减产,挤压了供应并推高了原油价格。 2022年,创纪录的原油产量推动沙特阿拉伯成为20国集团中扩张最快的国家。

根据本周公布的最新展望,国际货币基金组织将这个全球最大原油出口国明年的增长预期从 5.5% 提高至 6%,“在主要经济体中仅次于印度,其增长速度将跻身于沙特之列”过去十年来最快的突飞猛进。

该基金预计,到 2025 年初,沙特石油产量将达到 10 百万桶/日,而目前为 9 百万桶/日,为近三年来的最低水平。沙特阿拉伯表示,其产能约为每日 12 百万桶,并且在过去十年中很少会达到今天的水平。

马蒂表示,国际货币基金组织根据2023年的实际数据以及将限产措施延长至6月,将沙特今年经济增长预测从2.7%小幅下调至2.6%。彭博经济研究预测 2024 年经济将增长 1.1%,并假设减产将持续到今年年底。

在油价数月来首次突破每桶 90 美元之后,中东敌对行动的恶化为可能的政策转变提供了背景。 OPEC 及其盟友将于 6 月 1 日召开会议,一些分析师预计该组织可能会开始放松限制。

在牺牲销量来支持石油市场后,沙特阿拉伯可能会选择增加产量,因为该国面临多年的财政赤字,而且原油价格仍低于平衡预算所需的水平。

沙特阿拉伯正在花费数千亿美元实现经济多元化,而该国 90% 以上的出口仍然依赖石油及其密切衍生品(石化产品和塑料)。

美国的限制性货币政策不一定会拖累沙特阿拉伯,因为沙特阿拉伯通常会与美联储步调一致,以保护其与美元挂钩的货币。

考虑到沙特银行的资产负债表结构以及油价上涨导致沙特境内流动性充裕,马蒂认为美联储可能放缓降息的影响“微乎其微”。

马蒂表示,国际货币基金组织还预计,在沙特发展从制造业到物流等行业的计划的推动下,至少在未来几年,“石油行业的增长势头将保持强劲”。

马蒂说,沙特“已经进行了许多变革性改革,并在监管环境方面采取了许多正确的行动”。 “但我认为其中一些改革需要时间才能实现。”

 

主要图片(来源:路透社)


原文链接/oilandgas360

World Oil


(Bloomberg) – The International Monetary Fund expects OPEC and its partners to start increasing oil production gradually from July, a transition that’s set to catapult Saudi Arabia back into the ranks of the world’s fastest-growing economies next year.

“We are assuming the full reversal of cuts is happening at the beginning of 2025,” Amine Mati, the lender’s mission chief to the kingdom, said in an interview in Washington, where the IMF and the World Bank are holding their spring meetings.

The view explains why the IMF is turning more upbeat on Saudi Arabia, whose economy contracted last year as it led the OPEC+ alliance alongside Russia in production cuts that squeezed supplies and pushed up crude prices. In 2022, record crude output propelled Saudi Arabia to the fastest expansion in the Group of 20.

Under the latest outlook unveiled this week, the IMF improved next year’s growth estimate for the world’s biggest crude exporter from 5.5% to 6% — second only to India among major economies in an upswing that would be among the kingdom’s fastest spurts over the past decade.

The fund projects Saudi oil production will reach 10 MMbpd in early 2025, from what’s now a near three-year low of 9 MMbbl. Saudi Arabia says its production capacity is around 12 MMbpd and it’s rarely pumped as low as today’s levels in the past decade.

Mati said the IMF slightly lowered its forecast for Saudi economic growth this year to 2.6% from 2.7% based on actual figures for 2023 and the extension of production curbs to June. Bloomberg Economics predicts an expansion of 1.1% in 2024 and assumes the output cuts will stay until the end of this year.

Worsening hostilities in the Middle East provide the backdrop to a possible policy shift after oil prices topped $90 a barrel for the first time in months. OPEC and its allies will gather on June 1 and some analysts expect the group may start to unwind the curbs.

After sacrificing sales volumes to support the oil market, Saudi Arabia may instead opt to pump more as it faces years of fiscal deficits and with crude prices still below what it needs to balance the budget.

Saudi Arabia is spending hundreds of billions of dollars to diversify an economy that still relies on oil and its close derivatives — petrochemicals and plastics — for more than 90% of its exports.

Restrictive U.S. monetary policy won’t necessarily be a drag on Saudi Arabia, which usually moves in lockstep with the Federal Reserve to protect its currency peg to the dollar.

Mati sees a “negligible” impact from potentially slower interest-rate cuts by the Fed, given the structure of the Saudi banks’ balance sheets and the plentiful liquidity in the kingdom thanks to elevated oil prices.

The IMF also expects the “non-oil sector growth momentum to remain strong” for at least the next couple of years, Mati said, driven by the kingdom’s plans to develop industries from manufacturing to logistics.

The kingdom “has undertaken many transformative reforms and is doing a lot of the right actions in terms of the regulatory environment,” Mati said. “But I think it takes time for some of those reforms to materialize.”

 

Lead image (Credit: Reuters)