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Saudi Arabia On Course For Trade Deficit With China
...s largest partner of all; China (see chart 1). China has been the largest source of imports for Saudi Arabia since 2017, after jousting with the USA for the top spot in the years prior (see chart 2). The value of Chinese imports has increased each year with the exception of Covid-hit 2020. Last ye...
Volume: 67Issue: 51/52Published at Fri, 20 Dec 2024 -
Egypt’s Financial Woes Mount: Record Debt & Deficit As Devaluation Looms
...th the IMF. But as oil prices have risen in recent years gasoline and diesel subsidies have reappeared by the back door (MEES, 10 November). The E£119.4bn ($3.9bn) budgeted for 2023-24 spending on oil products subsidies is the highest since 2017-18 in Egyptian pound terms and 2018-19 in dollar te...
Volume: 66Issue: 50Published at Fri, 15 Dec 2023 -
Saudi Arabia Budgets For $21bn Deficit In 2024
...sults, which show a 41.5% year-on-year increase to $54.1bn in capital expenditure. This is the highest figure since 2017, and with much of the investment responsibilities having been moved off-budget to state entities such as PIF, this indicates significantly higher investments than six years ago. De...
Volume: 66Issue: 49Published at Fri, 08 Dec 2023 -
Oman LNG Export Revenues Set To Smash Annual Record
...talEnergies (5.54%), Korea LNG (5%), PTTEP (2%) and a trio of Japanese firms. GAS REVOLUTION The start-up of BP’s 1bn cfd Khazzan tight gas project in 2017 spurred Oman’s gas success, with the second phase 500mn cfd Ghazeer play boosting production when it came online in October 2020. Do...
Volume: 65Issue: 50Published at Fri, 16 Dec 2022 -
Algeria Plans ‘Year For The Economy’ In 2022
...creasingly difficult due to the Algerian market’s “modest absorption capacity.” Although the government has vowed not to resort to quantitative easing from the central bank – as it controversially did between 2017 and 2019 (MEES, 28 June 2019) – it continues to engage in what it calls “monetary fi...
Volume: 64Issue: 51/52Published at Fri, 24 Dec 2021 -
Qatar Budget Surplus To Shrink In 2020
...wards a $4.9bn surplus, although lower H2 oil prices could ultimately bring this down. Following on from 2018’s $4.1bn surplus, the 2020 budget sets the scene for a third consecutive surplus. However, even the combined surpluses over 2018-20 fall short of the deficit that Doha racked up in 2017 al...
Volume: 62Issue: 51-52Published at Fri, 20 Dec 2019 -
Saudi Budgets For Bigger Deficit, Banks On 2020 Gdp Boost
...nsiderably higher than 2017 levels. Riyadh expects spending this year to come in some $15bn under budget and puts this down to a combination of efficiency gains and greater involvement of the private sector “reducing the need to finance these projects from the budget.” GROWTH SET TO SURGE? Sa...
Volume: 62Issue: 50Published at Fri, 13 Dec 2019 -
Egypt: Current Account Deficit Widens Despite Strengthening Growth
...a surplus of $13.7bn the following year and $12.8bn for 2017-18 before slipping to slight deficit for 2018-19 (see chart 2). 1. EGYPT'S CURRENT ACCOUNT DEFICIT ROSE TO $8.2BN FOR 2018-19 AMID LOWER REMITTANCES AND RECORD INVESTMENT OUTFLOWS ($BN) EGYPTIAN FINANCIAL YEARS RUN FROM JULY-JU...
Volume: 62Issue: 49Published at Fri, 06 Dec 2019 -
Iran: Khamenei Looks To ‘Resistance’ Budget For 2019
...rchases in return for being granted ‘waivers’ – MEES, 16 November), and at least some of those Mediterranean and East Asian countries that have halted buying to restart. Korea, which imported 361,000 b/d from Iran in 2017 took zero for the third straight month in November. Japan and Taiwan also took ze...
Volume: 61Issue: 51-52Published at Fri, 21 Dec 2018 -
Saudi Reveals Optimistic 2019 Budget But Still Expects To Load Up On Debt
...is option for long. While much of the borrowing will be on domestic markets, the hefty budget deficit spells another trip to the international debt markets for Saudi Arabia. Having issued $17.5bn worth of bonds in 2016, Saudi Arabia smashed this in 2017 with $21.5bn, before falling back to just $13...
Volume: 61Issue: 51-52Published at Fri, 21 Dec 2018 -
Qatar: New 2.5GW Plant Powers Economic Growth
...provements in reducing its greenhouse gas emissions have so far come to naught. However, Kahramaa has prequalified 16 international solar power developers to bid for a 500MW solar photovoltaic plant at Al Kharsaah, 80km west of Doha, and is expected to invite bids shortly (MEES, 29 September 2017). QA...
Volume: 61Issue: 50Published at Fri, 14 Dec 2018 -
Algeria Set For $5bn 2018 Trade Deficit: As Good As It Gets?
...1.03mn b/d for the first nine months of 2018, output of condensate and field NGLs was down 5.6% at 472,000 b/d, whilst gas output fell 1.1% to 67.5bcm. The dip in gas production came despite key project start-ups at Reggane (MEES, 22 December 2017) and Timimoun (MEES, 2 March 2018). Whilst un...
Volume: 61Issue: 49Published at Fri, 07 Dec 2018 -
Saudi 2018 Budget Delays Austerity To Jump-Start Flat Economy
...onomic stimulus alongside planned economic reforms will facilitate non-oil sector growth – a key pillar of Vision 2030. The 2018 budget was launched on 19 December. In an accompanying statement the kingdom stated that the economy contracted 0.5% in 2017. An economy mired in the doldrums would ce...
Volume: 60Issue: 51/52Published at Fri, 22 Dec 2017 -
Iran Struggles To Attract Finance As Trump Ramps Up The Pressure
...ong more than 30 foreign companies that have qualified for oil and gas projects in Iran since sanctions were eased, the much touted re-opening of Iran’s oil and gas sector to IOCs is at risk of stalling. Iran was hoping to have signed three deals with IOCs under its new IPC terms by March 2017 (ME...
Volume: 60Issue: 51/52Published at Fri, 22 Dec 2017 -
Saudi Powers Ahead With Reform Plans
...halve its budget deficit to $42.5bn for 2017 – but this is due to higher oil prices rather than any new policies from Riyadh. Non-oil revenue, the ‘holy grail’ of Vision 2030, is expected to grow by only $1.2bn or 2.4% this year (MEES, 24 November). Riyadh’s ideas for broadening its economy ra...
Volume: 60Issue: 50Published at Fri, 15 Dec 2017 -
Iran Cuts Budget Sharply For 2018-19
...Iran unveiled its draft 2018-19 budget this week. On the surface it’s relatively unchanged from the current year (2017-18), with modest revenue and spending gains penciled in. But, with the IMF pegging inflation at 10%, the budget is in effect sharply reduced in real terms. The new budget co...
Volume: 60Issue: 50Published at Fri, 15 Dec 2017 -
Tunisia Oil Output Rebound From Protests, Fundamental Problems Remain
...nisia, for whom their operations in the country were a key or the only asset, have either quit the country or gone bankrupt. The number of active permits fell to 31 at end-2015 and a mere 21 as of end-October. Ireland’s Circle went bust at the start of 2017 (whilst Canada-listed SDX bought Circle’s Egypt an...
Volume: 60Issue: 49Published at Fri, 08 Dec 2017 -
Jordan Budgets For Lower Deficit, Cost Rationalization In 2018
...venues. Unveiling the draft budget to parliament on 25 November, Finance Minister Umar Malhas, said that the deficit (after foreign grants) is projected to fall to JD543mn ($766mn at JD1=$1.41), or 1.8% of GDP in 2018 from the revised JD752mn, or 2.6% of GDP in 2017. Budget expenditure in 2018 will ri...
Volume: 60Issue: 48Published at Fri, 01 Dec 2017 -
Middle East Set For M&A Boost In 2017
...nk of Abu Dhabi and First Gulf Bank. Due to be completed in Q1 2017, it will be the largest domestic Middle Eastern deal of all time, creating the largest bank in the Mena region. Many of the region’s biggest banks missed analysts’ earnings estimates in Q3 due to an increase in non-performing lo...
Volume: 59Issue: 51/52Published at Fri, 23 Dec 2016 -
Qatar Slashes 2017 Budget Deficit But Maintains Spending At High Levels
...Qatar Slashes 2017 Budget Deficit But Maintains Spending At High Levels Qatar’s budget for 2017 projects that it will post its second consecutive deficit, although it expects this to fall $8.4bn to $7.8bn. But a conservative oil price assumption means next year’s deficit may actually be as...
Volume: 59Issue: 51/52Published at Fri, 23 Dec 2016