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Saudi annual oil revenue expected to rise 66% to $249bn

- SARMAD KHAN

Saudi Arabia’s oil revenue is expected to jump 66 per cent this year to about $249 billion amid surging crude prices that will enable the Arab world’s biggest economy to increase spending, Jadwa Investment said.

Brent, the benchmark for two thirds of the world’s oil, rose 69 per cent year-on-year in the first quarter of this year to an average of $103 a barrel.

That was reflected in a “substantia­l jump in royalties and income tax received by the Ministry of Finance”, Asad Khan, chief economist and head of research at Jadwa, said in a research note yesterday.

“As oil prices remain elevated, and Saudi crude oil production rises in line with the Opec+ agreement, we expect government oil revenue to continue showing sizeable yearly rises.”

Both Brent and West Texas Intermedia­te, the benchmark for US crude, have risen more than 60 per cent since the beginning of the year.

Brent climbed to a notch under $140 a barrel in March, its highest since 2008, before giving up some gains.

The war in Ukraine and the subsequent western sanctions against Russia, the world’s second-largest energy exporter, have caused oil prices to soar.

A tightening net of sanctions is stoking fears of a supply shock to the global energy market amid strong demand for crude.

Brent is expected to average $100 a barrel this year, its highest median since 2013, according to the World Bank. Emirates NBD expected crude to average $120 a barrel this year.

Saudi Arabia’s revenue in the first quarter of this year rose 36 per cent to 278bn riyals ($74bn), with income from oil climbing 58 per cent on an annual basis to 183bn riyals, the Ministry of Finance said on Sunday.

The kingdom’s spending in the first three months of the year rose 4 per cent to 220bn riyals.

Jadwa estimates a 5 per cent overspend versus budgeted levels, with the world’s biggest oil exporter’s spending climbing to about 1 trillion riyals.

“Looking ahead, we expect a pick-up in outlays on developmen­t projects during the remainder of the year, particular­ly on Vision [2030] realisatio­n programmes, to raise capital expenditur­e on a quarterly basis,” Mr Khan said.

The kingdom’s non-oil revenue rose 7 per cent to 94.2bn riyals at the end of March, although Jadwa expected the kingdom’s non-oil income for the full year to fall.

“While we expect some segments within non-oil revenue to continue showing yearly rises, our current forecast assumes full-year 2022 non-oil revenue, as a whole, to decline by 9 per cent year-on-year, primarily because of lower yearly taxes on goods and services,” Mr Khan said.

The kingdom posted a fiscal surplus of 57.5bn riyals in the first quarter.

Jadwa estimates a 2022 surplus of 298bn riyals, about 7.8 per cent of Saudi Arabia’s gross domestic product and “naturally expected” surpluses during the remaining quarters of the year.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund estimates the Saudi economy will expand 7.4 per cent this year, driven by higher oil revenue, a projected improvemen­t in the country’s non-oil GDP and its efforts to diversify the economy.

Continued recovery from the coronaviru­s pandemic also underpins the kingdom’s economic growth, which the World Bank estimates at 7 per cent this year. Jadwa estimates the economy will expand 7.7 per cent in 2022.

 ?? EPA ?? Continued recovery from the coronaviru­s pandemic is adding to Saudi Arabia’s improved economic performanc­e
EPA Continued recovery from the coronaviru­s pandemic is adding to Saudi Arabia’s improved economic performanc­e

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