The National - News

HOW RIYADH COULD RESPOND TO THREATS OF GLOBAL SANCTIONS

▶ Saudi Arabia has economic influence but its companies could be exposed to escalating tensions

- JENNIFER GNANA

Saudi Arabia has a number of tools it can use to retaliate against any potential US sanctions related to the disappeara­nce of Jamal Khashoggi, the Saudi journalist who went missing in Turkey this month.

The kingdom’s response could include halting oil exports, selling off its US Treasury holdings and turning to new arms suppliers.

As the world’s largest oil exporter and second-largest crude supplier to the US after Canada, Saudi Arabia can roil oil markets if it were to halt its sale of crude and products to Washington. This would be the first such measure since the 1973 oil embargo.

The Saudi authoritie­s “have at their disposal tens of options [to retaliate],” said Abdulkhale­q Abdulla, a political science professor at the UAE University. “Some are not to the liking of the American or the world economy: investment is one but there is the mighty oil weapon.”

Tensions between Washington and Riyadh over the disappeara­nce of Khashoggi on October 2 after his visit to the Saudi consulate in Istanbul increased over the past week. US President Donald Trump told CBS on Saturday he would inflict “severe punishment” against Saudi Arabia if it was found to be behind Mr Khashoggi’s disappeara­nce.

The kingdom issued a rebuttal on Sunday, saying it would “respond with greater action” given its “influentia­l role in the global economy”, the state-run Saudi Press Agency reported, citing an unnamed Saudi official.

Oil prices have already risen in response to the rhetoric, with internatio­nal benchmark Brent trading above the $80-per-barrel mark after climbing to a three-year high of $86 per barrel last week.

Crude prices have surged over the past few months after the US decided to reimpose sanctions on Iran, a major oil producer, leaving Saudi-led Opec and members of a global oil deal with the task of replacing lost Iranian barrels as countries boycott Tehran for fear of falling afoul of Washington.

Saudi Arabia, which pumps 12.9 per cent of the world’s oil, is the only Opec member with substantia­l spare oil capacity that could be used to meet market demand. The kingdom can tame oil prices if they were to hit $100 per barrel as some analysts have forecast with the onset of US sanctions against Iran on November 4.

Mr Trump’s comments led to a market sell-off on the kingdom’s Tadawul benchmark index this week. After shedding about 7 per cent on Sunday, the market rebounded at the end of trading the following day, up 4.1 per cent.

The uncertaint­y regarding Khashoggi’s fate has also led to business executives such as Richard Branson and JP Morgan’s Jamie Dimon, as well as media partners, withdrawin­g from an upcoming investment conference in Riyadh this month.

Possible US sanctions against Saudi Arabia could “unleash a wild bull [run] on oil prices,” said Iman Nasseri, managing director for the Middle East at Facts Global Energy in London.

“Should they decide to cut production by half a million or 1 million barrels a day, the market will be extremely tight and we should expect prices of $100 plus easily.”

Any possible Saudi output cut would come as a blow to Mr Trump’s efforts to rein in prices ahead of his country’s midterm elections next month. The possible curtailmen­t of production by Saudi Arabia, which has in recent months boosted its exports to the US, partly in response to Mr Trump’s calls to slow the oil price rally, will come amid declining supply from Iran.

Giovanni Staunovo, a commodity analyst at Swiss bank UBS, said the market was pricing in some risk premium with traders closely watching Saudi crude exports until tensions between the US and Riyadh ease.

“Oil was not part of Saudi politics in recent years,” he said. “Considerin­g that spare capacity is already extremely low, the oil market cannot afford another ‘accident’.”

The repercussi­ons from any US sanctions against Saudi Arabia will reverberat­e through the global economy as higher oil prices stoke inflation.

“Naturally as a result of any sanctions inflation will rise in America, but given global economics this contagion in terms of impacts may spread to other countries who have renegotiat­ed their tariffs and other trade issues with [the US],” said Theodore Karasik, senior adviser at Washington consultanc­y Gulf State Analytics.

Besides the oil weapon, Saudi Arabia is the 10th-largest holder of US Treasury securities as of July this year, with $166.8 billion, according to figures from the US Treasury.

The kingdom “is in much the same position as China is, or perhaps Japan back in the 1980s, when the ownership of US treasuries was used as a tool in terms of foreign policy and relationsh­ips,” said Mr Karasik.

“Selling US Treasuries coupled with adjustment­s in the oil market can create an impact on the US stock market. However the problem is that this may lead to a global flu.”

Saudi Arabia also has vast investment­s in the US. The Public Investment Fund, the Saudi sovereign wealth fund, has made 34 investment­s in the US, including a $3.5bn stake in ride-hailing company Uber, a 5 per cent stake in car maker Tesla, and a $1bn investment in Tesla rival Lucid Motors.

Last year, US private equity company Blackstone and PIF agreed to set up a $40bn vehicle to invest in infrastruc­ture projects, mainly in the US.

If the situation escalates Saudi companies could also shun American companies and markets. There are already calls, most notably yesterday by Bahrain’s top diplomat and UAE businessme­n to boycott US companies such as Uber, whose chief executive pulled out of the investment conference in Riyadh this month. Amid such heightened times, Saudi companies such as Prince Alwaleed’s Kingdom Holding Company which has stakes in Citi, Uber and Twitter could enter the fray and divest.

Another potential impact could come from Saudi Arabia’s arms purchases.

Last year Saudi Arabia was the third-largest military spender in the world after the US and China, accounting for 4 per cent of global military expenditur­e, according to figures from the Stockholm Internatio­nal Peace Research Institute.

The kingdom sources a big chunk of its military purchases from the US, which clinched a $350bn arms deal with Riyadh in May last year.

 ?? Reuters ?? The ride-hailing operator Uber is among the US interests in which Saudi Arabia has invested, with a $3.5bn stake
Reuters The ride-hailing operator Uber is among the US interests in which Saudi Arabia has invested, with a $3.5bn stake
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