Daily Dispatch

Saudis try to claw back clout

- By JOHN KEMP

SAUDI Arabia is trying to reestablis­h some negotiatin­g leverage within Opec by threatenin­g to block an output cutting deal unless other members share more of the burden.

Saudi negotiator­s made a mistake at the organisati­on’s last meeting in September by appearing too eager to secure a deal, which has emboldened other members to harden their own positions.

Now the Saudis are trying to push others into making concession­s by raising the prospect that if they do not there will be no deal, an outcome that would be worse for everyone.

For two years between mid2014 and mid-2016, Saudi Arabia took the hardest line within Opec, insisting it would only cut output if joined by all other Opec and major non-Opec producers. For reasons that remain unexplaine­d, the Saudi position shifted significan­tly between the Opec meetings in June 2016 and September 2016, and the kingdom became much more interested in reaching an agreement.

The shift may have been the result of a change in oil minister, the continued drawdown of the kingdom’s foreign currency reserves, and the deteriorat­ing economic situation at home.

Whatever the reason, Saudi negotiator­s went into the last round of Opec talks in September determined to obtain a provisiona­l agreement and willing to show enough flexibilit­y to obtain it.

But by appearing eager for a deal, Saudi Arabia signalled it wanted an agreement more than its major rivals within Opec, Iran and Iraq, and its major outside competitor, Russia.

In response, all three have hardened their positions and resisted pressure to join Saudi Arabia in cutting their own production.

Russia has offered a freeze dressed up as a cut from a planned increase in 2017.

Iraq has hinted at a cut which really appears to be a freeze.

Iran’s position remains ambiguous, but it insists it will not limit its output.

Opec members and observers understand that in any realistic deal Saudi Arabia and its close allies, the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait, will do most of the real cutting.

Past experience shows Saudi Arabia and its allies always provide most of the real reductions, with other members frequently cheating on quotas.

For an agreement to produce a significan­t tightening of the supply-demand balance and lift oil prices, Saudi Arabia and its allies will have to contribute very large output cuts.

The market will not assign much credibilit­y to promises of cutbacks by other members given their history of non-compliance.

The Saudis need token cuts from other producers, or at least a credible freeze, however, to provide them with diplomatic cover for what is a humiliatin­g climbdown.

To re-establish leverage in the negotiatio­ns, Saudi officials have resorted to brinkmansh­ip, threatenin­g that there will be no deal at all unless Iran, Iraq and Russia are more cooperativ­e.

It remains unclear whether Iraq, Iran and Russia really would be hurt more by failure to conclude a deal and whether they are ready to give Saudi Arabia at least the cosmetic reductions the kingdom needs. — Reuters

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