Windsor Star

Saudis make surprise oil cut with eye on $2T Aramco IPO

Government vows to trim production, predicts it will soon reach valuation goal

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ANNMARIE HORDERN, SALMA EL WARDANY, GRANT SMITH and JAVIER BLAS

Saudi Arabia surprised the oil market with deeper production cuts, sending crude prices soaring and predicting that Aramco, fresh from its initial public offering, will soon surge past the elusive Us$2-trillion valuation.

After two days of gruelling talks in Vienna that had focused on adjusting the OPEC+ quota and redistribu­ting output cuts more equitably, Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman sent prices soaring with the promise to take the kingdom’s production down to levels not seen on a sustained basis since 2014, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Oil jumped as much as 2.4 per cent in New York, and Prince Abdulaziz predicted that Saudi Aramco’s

Us$1.7-trillion IPO valuation would soon soar above the level long coveted by his brother, Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman.

“Aramco will be higher than the $2 trillion, and they can bet that this will happen,” Prince Abdulaziz said. The state-controlled company would reach that valuation “in a few months” after its shares start trading on Dec. 11, he said.

Aramco didn’t immediatel­y respond to a request for comment about the minister’s prediction.

While a surprise, the move wasn’t unpreceden­ted. Three years ago in the same press room at OPEC’S Vienna headquarte­rs,

Prince Abdulaziz’s predecesso­r as energy minister, Khalid Al-falih, dropped a similar bombshell on the market by promising to cut substantia­lly below the level it had just agreed with fellow members.

OPEC+, which pumps more than half the world’s oil, agreed in Vienna on Friday to reduce its output limit by 500,000 barrels a day. The deal was initially dismissed by analysts as “housekeepi­ng” or a “nothing-burger” because it simply brought the group’s production target in line with recent levels.

But the Saudi delegation had something else up its sleeve, having made extra efforts to conceal its plans through days of meetings despite hundreds of reporters, consultant­s and oil traders watching every move. Inside the conference room of the Organizati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries’ secretaria­t in the Austrian capital, Prince Abdulaziz asked fellow ministers to maintain complete secrecy on what they were discussing.

“As we moved out of the conference room, I did say: this time it’s going to be different,” Prince Abdulaziz said in a Bloomberg TV interview after the meeting. It was “a common belief and collective belief that we had last night and this morning and this afternoon. I would like to carry on with that spirit.”

On Friday afternoon, as oil prices traded lower and OPEC’S closing press conference was just beginning, the prince revealed the “beautiful news” he’d hinted at the previous day.

“We will continue the voluntary cut of 400,000” barrels a day below Saudi Arabia’s official output target, he told reporters. That would bring the total supply cut implemente­d by OPEC and its allies to 2.1 million barrels a day, a number that even the most bullish analysts and traders hadn’t considered prior to the meeting.

The kingdom will pump 9.7 million barrels a day, he said. That’s a reduction of about 300,000 barrels a day from its output in November and 100,000 below the yearto-date average, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Saudi Arabia is cutting production because the oil market faces a tricky period early next year. Demand growth is slowing and another big expansion in rival production is coming down the pipeline. Together those factors could create another oversupply that drives internatio­nal prices back down toward US$50 a barrel. That’s too low for most OPEC members to balance their budgets, and would make an unfortunat­e epilogue for the Aramco IPO.

Internatio­nal media had been proved wrong for doubting the Saudi state oil firm’s valuation, Prince Abdulaziz said. When the company priced its shares on Thursday night, it was one “one of the proudest days” of his career, he said.

Prince Abdulaziz did warn that Saudi Arabia’s voluntary extra cuts were conditiona­l on other OPEC countries meeting their own production targets in full. Over the past year, several nations, including Iraq, Nigeria and Russia have consistent­ly exceeded their quotas.

 ?? LEONHARD FOEGER/REUTERS ?? Saudi Arabia’s Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman has promised to take the kingdom’s production down to levels not seen on a sustained basis since 2014, He predicted that Saudi Aramco’s Us$1.7-trillion IPO valuation would soon rise above US$2 trillion.
LEONHARD FOEGER/REUTERS Saudi Arabia’s Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman has promised to take the kingdom’s production down to levels not seen on a sustained basis since 2014, He predicted that Saudi Aramco’s Us$1.7-trillion IPO valuation would soon rise above US$2 trillion.

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