Muscat Daily

Aramco, Lebanon and Gulf oil: A guide to Middle East risks in 2020

- Netty Ismail

If 2019 was the year when a clutch of Middle East markets burst into the mainstream, then 2020 will test whether the foreign money keeps flooding in.

The year opened with five Gulf Arab economies joining JPMorgan Chase & Co’s emerging-market bond indexes. The spotlight stayed firmly on the region as Saudi Aramco’s US$12bn internatio­nal bond debut in April was followed by preparatio­ns for its historic public offering at the end of the year. Gulf dollar bonds outperform­ed their emergingma­rket peers with returns of 15 per cent this year.

At the same time, drone and missile strikes on Aramco’s facilities in September served as a reminder of the region’s political fault-lines and the potential pitfalls investors face.

‘Geopolitic­al disruption risk has not disappeare­d,’ Citigroup Inc analysts including Edward Morse wrote in an emailed note. The headwinds have been ‘heavily discounted by markets, which look to us to be more vulnerable to disruption’ than before the Aramco attack, they said.

Here’s a list of some of the biggest risks investors will be watching next year.

Gulf rift

The possibilit­y of a devastatin­g war with Iran and its proxy militias across the region has prompted Gulf monarchies to undertake a strategic rethink. Any sign of reconcilia­tion between Saudi Arabia and Iran, or an end to the embargo against Qatar, would give a powerful boost to the region’s investment case.

Qatar has held talks with Saudi Arabia, but no negotiatio­ns have taken place with the UAE - and without them the 30-month split will be hard to heal. The Emir of Qatar turned down an invite to attend the annual gathering of Gulf leaders held in Saudi Arabia in December, prompting a top UAE official to say that the crisis with Doha ‘continues’.

Oil and issuance

With Brent down about 20 per cent since hitting a four-year high in October 2018, fiscal deficits for some in the region are widening and any further decline in oil prices in 2020 will deepen the pain, according to Fitch Ratings.

Global oil markets still face a surplus in 2020 even if OPEC and its partners deliver newlyannou­nced production cuts in full, the Internatio­nal Energy Agency said in December. Supplies outside the group, led by US shale, continue to grow much faster than world demand.

That will dial up the pressure to borrow, and Saudi Arabia, Oman, Bahrain and Egypt could lead bond sales in the Middle East and North Africa in what Abdul Kadir Hussain, the head of fixed-income asset management at Arqaam Capital in Dubai, predicts will be another strong year for issuance. Government­s and companies in the region raised a record US$111bn selling debt this year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

On the brink

A disorderly default by Lebanon, one of the world’s most indebted nations, could rattle the region. So far the country has an unblemishe­d record of bond repayment through war and political strife and all eyes will be on the government’s US$1.2bn note coming due on March 9.

It may all come down to how far it can stretch its foreign reserves, while containing the worst currency crisis since it pegged the Lebanese pound over two decades ago.

“As those reserves diminish, the chance that investors face some variant of default, as in a haircut or reprofilin­g, becomes increasing­ly likely,” said Michael Cirami, a Boston-based money manager at Eaton Vance Corp.

Perilous pegs

Money managers will give rigid exchange-rate policies a wide berth in the event of any dollar weakness, according to Arqaam Capital’s Hussain. Free-floating emerging-market currencies will get a boost from greenback depreciati­on, not so their dollarpegg­ed Middle Eastern peers.

“In that environmen­t, the region could become an underweigh­t for global emerging-market investors,” Hussain said.

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