The National - News

Gulf’s national oil companies turn focus to trading

- ANTHONY MCAULEY

The region’s national oil companies (NOCs) are reviving plans to beef up their trading operations, an area they have long shied away from.

Among the new efforts, Abu Dhabi National Oil Company is currently studying proposals to make its trading and risk management contribute to its bottom line, part of the company’s broader effort to be more commercial and in line with its private sector peers.

In the spring, Saudi Aramco unveiled its new Aramco Trading Company (ATC) website to announce stepped-up trading in refined oil products. After a slow first five years, ATC last summer put Ibrahim Al Buainain, a graduate of MIT’s Sloan School of Management, in charge. He is bringing in the more sophistica­ted, data-driven trading approach necessary to maximise margins as Aramco invests heavily in downstream assets worldwide, which means it has many more products to sell and trade.

Kuwait Petroleum has also been consulting with major oil companies in recent months, including BP and Royal Dutch Shell, about new efforts to bolster trading operations, according to several people involved.

Still, the perennial question remains: why, in a region famed for its centuries of trading prowess, and home to the world’s largest and most powerful oil producers, have oil trading efforts so far been cursory?

The risk-averse cultures in NOCs hitherto run more as government bureaucrac­ies than commercial organisati­ons is one explanatio­n.

“A key reason is that losses aren’t tolerated,” said Owain Johnson, the managing director of CME Group and until last year the head of Dubai Mercantile Exchange (DME). “If you have a hedging programme, one element of it is going to lose money. Hedging is like an insurance policy, except at the NOCs you would get fired if you took out an insurance policy and there wasn’t actually a fire – that doesn’t really motivate people.”

As an executive at one regional NOC said: “The boss knows that a well-run trading operation can add US$1 to every barrel. There’s been a lot of talk but nothing much has happened yet, so he thinks it’s time to do something.”

An innovative approach borne out of necessity was adopted this year by Iraq’s State Organizati­on for Marketing of Oil (Somo). The country has been stretched financiall­y by internal conflict and Somo itself has had its resources squeezed, so that its sales and marketing staff have had to improvise.

In the spring, Somo’s director-general, Falah Alamri, began holding auctions through DME, and so far sold 6 million barrels of mostly Basrah Light crude oil.

The programme, run by Somo’s head of Asian marketing, Ali Al Shatari, while not exactly state-of-the-art trading, has helped to push up the price premium for Iraq’s crude by about 30 per cent and caught the eye of other NOCs, according to well-placed market sources. Other developmen­ts helping to revive the NOCs’ interest in trading include concern over moves by China’s big oil companies to exert greater influence over pricing of Middle East oil.

But the most important factor is the new sense of urgency to be more entreprene­urial, the milestone for which was Aramco’s plan for an IPO of shares. Fostering that cultural shift is the big challenge.

“It’s a difficult transition to go from merely being a producer of oil, to selling through third parties, to selling on the spot markets, and then to buying and selling, which is an entirely different thing,” said Jorge Montepeque, who is the senior vice president at Italian major Eni’s shipping and trading division.

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