Toronto Star

Saudi Aramco slashes jobs after oil price dip

First-quarter profit dropped 25 per cent as demand collapsed

- MATTHEW MARTIN, ANTHONY DI PAOLA AND JAVIER BLAS

Saudi Aramco, the world’s biggest oil exporter, has begun cutting hundreds of jobs as it looks to reduce costs after a slump in energy prices, according to people familiar with the matter.

Aramco is letting go of mostly foreign staff across several divisions, with affected employees being informed earlier this week, the people said, asking not to be identified as the informatio­n is private.

The company employs almost 80,000 people and goes through a round of cuts annually. This year’s is bigger than normal, according to several of the people.

“Aramco is adapting to the highly complex and rapidly changing business environmen­t,” the firm said in a statement.

“We are not providing informatio­n regarding the details of any action at this time, but all our actions are designed to provide us more agility, resilience and competitiv­eness, with a focus on long-term growth.”

Aramco’s first-quarter profit slumped 25 per cent year-onyear to 62.5 billion riyals ($22.6 billion) as coronaviru­s shutdowns caused demand for oil to collapse. Brent crude has more than doubled since late April as more economies reopen.

But at around $41 (U.S.) a barrel, it’s still down 37 per cent this year, putting huge pressure on producers globally.

Aramco has already slashed capital expenditur­e for this year to between $25 billion and $30 billion from an initial target of $40 billion and put 2021 spending under review.

The Dhahran, Saudi Arabiabase­d producer still has high spending commitment­s. It completed a $69.1 billion acquisitio­n of 70 per cent of chemicals maker Saudi Basic Industries Corp. this week. While it stretched out the payments to the seller, the Saudi sovereign wealth fund, over the next eight years, it still needs to pay $7 billion on Aug. 2.

It also committed to giving shareholde­rs a $75-billion dividend this year, although it has said it could cut the amount allocated to the Saudi government, which owns around 98 per cent of the stock.

The shares of Aramco, which listed in Riyadh in December, have fallen 14 per cent since their peak to 32.80 riyals. Its market valuation of almost $1.75 trillion is still the world’s biggest.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada