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Mismanagement is driving Saudi Arabia towards bankruptcy

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Mismanagement is driving Saudi Arabia towards bankruptcy
May 1, 2020 at 11:31 am | Published in: Article, International Organisations, Middle East, OPEC, Opinion, Saudi Arabia
2016_10-3-saudi-riyalGettyImages-612133560.jpg

A man counts Saudi riyal banknotes at a market in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia on 3 October 2016 [Fayez Nurdeline /AFP/Getty Images]
motasem-dalloul-e1478711188771.jpg

Motasem A Dalloul
@abujomaaGaza
May 1, 2020 at 11:31 am
On 6 March, the OPEC+ cartel failed to agree on a cut in oil production in the light of reduced demand due to the coronavirus pandemic affecting almost every country in the world. All of this came in the middle of a global financial crisis. Saudi Arabia proposed the cut, and OPEC members accepted it, but Russia, which is OPEC’s “+”, spearheaded the call to reject it.

“We have made this decision because no consensus has been found of how all the 24 countries should simultaneously react to the current situation,” Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak told reporters after the OPEC+ meeting in Vienna. “So as from April 1, we are starting to work without minding the quotas or reductions which were in place earlier, but this does not mean that each country would not monitor and analyse market developments.” Hours later, oil prices plummeted.

In retaliation for Russia’s rejection of the production cut, Saudi Arabia “started the oil price war” by cutting prices the most for at least 20 years. Two days after OPEC’s break with Russia, Bloomberg reported that the energy giant Saudi Aramco was “offering unprecedented discounts in Asia, Europe and the US to entice refiners to use Saudi crude.” On 6 March, the price of a barrel of crude oil was trading in international markets at around $45.55; by 9 March, it was just $31.29 a barrel, and fell as much as 30 per cent at one point.

“This has turned into a scorched Earth approach by Saudi Arabia, in particular, to deal with the problem of chronic overproduction,” John Kilduff, founding partner of Again Capital, told CNBC. The Saudi-Russian oil price war continued until Brent crude traded at $15.97 a barrel on 22 April and West Texas Intermediate traded at minus $40 a barrel on 21 April.

READ: What impact will the oil price crash have on the Arab world?

The situation angered US President Donald Trump who was under pressure from American oil producers facing huge losses. He looked for ways to end the crisis, including the taboo of increasing prices in America.

Trump’s administration was ready to support an OPEC+ agreement to reduce output to boost prices, and he threatened to impose import tariffs on foreign crude to protect energy workers and domestic oil companies if no deal was reached. “I’ll do whatever I have to do,” said the US President. American companies and jobs have to be protected. However, imposing tariffs meant that he would make the oil exporters, including Saudi Arabia, bear the losses of the US oil companies and pay for the workers who lost their jobs. Trump insisted that he would have Russia and Saudi Arabia “destroy themselves” if they do not end the price war by reducing output.

posterdddd.jpg

Saudi Arabia slips into destruction – Cartoon [Sabaaneh/MiddleEastMonitor]

Domestically, Saudi Arabia was damaged by its own policy of saturating the market with very low price oil which broke the basic supply and demand rule of economics. Aramco was classified by Forbes as the world’s most profitable oil company with a daily income of over $1 billion before the slump. A few days after flooding the market with oil, its market value “dropped to around $1.55 trillion,” reported Asia Times. That was bound to affect the Saudi government, which has no other real source of income.

Jordanian analyst Omar Ayasra told Al Jazeera that Saudi Arabia has lost billions due to its policy of saturating the oil market. He stressed that there would be a price to pay for this and the losses in the international markets and their consequences.

Last week, Bloomberg reported that Saudi Arabia “will rely on the biggest debt programme since its debut in international bond markets in 2016 to absorb the shock to the budget from collapsing energy prices and cuts in oil output.” According to Saudi Finance Minister Mohammed Al-Jadaan, “The government is looking at additional spending cuts and may issue as much as an extra 100 billion riyals of debt on top of 120 billion riyals already announced.” At the same time, Al Jazeera reported that the Kingdom has introduced austerity measures to help prop up the deficit.

Reuters reported on 29 April that, “Saudi Arabia’s central bank foreign reserves fell in March at their fastest rate in at least 20 years and to their lowest since 2011, while the Kingdom slipped into a $9 billion budget deficit in the first quarter as oil revenues collapsed.”

READ: Covid-19 and the oil market crash spell the end for US hegemony and the petrodollar

The former Qatari Energy Minister Abdullah Al-Atiyyah told Al Jazeera last week that Saudi Arabia ignored the supply and demand rule when it started its oil price war. The country would “weep” as a result, he predicted.

Although Saudi Arabia and Russia agreed to cut 23 per cent of their oil supplies in early April, equivalent to around 10 per cent of global supply, it has not yet had the desired effect. The Saudis are the bigger losers in this, because they lack other sources of income, while Russia has several alternatives, including gas. “Russia is in much better economic shape than Saudi to handle any shocks to its oil-related streams of revenue,” explained Oil Price.

Flooding the market with oil has backfired on Saudi Arabia. This suggests that de facto ruler Crown Prince Mohammad Bin Salman lacks the expertise and experience to handle such a crisis. Things are going to get a whole lot worse for him if Donald Trump goes ahead and basically scraps the 1945 deal which underpins the relationship between Saudi Arabia and the US and could see the US withdrawing its military protection of the Kingdom. If the US does withdraw its troops from Saudi Arabia, what will it do about Iran? If Aramco facilities are attacked and oil production is paralysed again, how will the Kingdom defend itself? Bin Salman has the future of the Kingdom in his hands.

Abdullah Al-Atiyyah believes that Saudi Arabia does not learn from its mistakes, so is destined to suffer more losses. It is unlikely to have many sympathisers apart from those foreign governments who have signed massive arms deals with the Kingdom. And possibly the supporters of Newcastle United Football Club, which its sovereign wealth fund is trying to buy for £300 million.

Moving from the rich list to the poorest list not only suggests that bankruptcy is a very real possibility, but also that Saudi Arabia is suffering from serious mismanagement at the very top. For a country blessed with such natural wealth, that is the real crying shame.

The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Monitor.

https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/20200501-mismanagement-is-driving-saudi-arabia-towards-bankruptcy/

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Mismanagement is driving Saudi Arabia towards bankruptcy
May 1, 2020 at 11:31 am | Published in: Article, International Organisations, Middle East, OPEC, Opinion, Saudi Arabia
2016_10-3-saudi-riyalGettyImages-612133560.jpg

A man counts Saudi riyal banknotes at a market in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia on 3 October 2016 [Fayez Nurdeline /AFP/Getty Images]
motasem-dalloul-e1478711188771.jpg

Motasem A Dalloul
@abujomaaGaza
May 1, 2020 at 11:31 am
On 6 March, the OPEC+ cartel failed to agree on a cut in oil production in the light of reduced demand due to the coronavirus pandemic affecting almost every country in the world. All of this came in the middle of a global financial crisis. Saudi Arabia proposed the cut, and OPEC members accepted it, but Russia, which is OPEC’s “+”, spearheaded the call to reject it.

“We have made this decision because no consensus has been found of how all the 24 countries should simultaneously react to the current situation,” Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak told reporters after the OPEC+ meeting in Vienna. “So as from April 1, we are starting to work without minding the quotas or reductions which were in place earlier, but this does not mean that each country would not monitor and analyse market developments.” Hours later, oil prices plummeted.

In retaliation for Russia’s rejection of the production cut, Saudi Arabia “started the oil price war” by cutting prices the most for at least 20 years. Two days after OPEC’s break with Russia, Bloomberg reported that the energy giant Saudi Aramco was “offering unprecedented discounts in Asia, Europe and the US to entice refiners to use Saudi crude.” On 6 March, the price of a barrel of crude oil was trading in international markets at around $45.55; by 9 March, it was just $31.29 a barrel, and fell as much as 30 per cent at one point.

“This has turned into a scorched Earth approach by Saudi Arabia, in particular, to deal with the problem of chronic overproduction,” John Kilduff, founding partner of Again Capital, told CNBC. The Saudi-Russian oil price war continued until Brent crude traded at $15.97 a barrel on 22 April and West Texas Intermediate traded at minus $40 a barrel on 21 April.

READ: What impact will the oil price crash have on the Arab world?

The situation angered US President Donald Trump who was under pressure from American oil producers facing huge losses. He looked for ways to end the crisis, including the taboo of increasing prices in America.

Trump’s administration was ready to support an OPEC+ agreement to reduce output to boost prices, and he threatened to impose import tariffs on foreign crude to protect energy workers and domestic oil companies if no deal was reached. “I’ll do whatever I have to do,” said the US President. American companies and jobs have to be protected. However, imposing tariffs meant that he would make the oil exporters, including Saudi Arabia, bear the losses of the US oil companies and pay for the workers who lost their jobs. Trump insisted that he would have Russia and Saudi Arabia “destroy themselves” if they do not end the price war by reducing output.

posterdddd.jpg

Saudi Arabia slips into destruction – Cartoon [Sabaaneh/MiddleEastMonitor]

Domestically, Saudi Arabia was damaged by its own policy of saturating the market with very low price oil which broke the basic supply and demand rule of economics. Aramco was classified by Forbes as the world’s most profitable oil company with a daily income of over $1 billion before the slump. A few days after flooding the market with oil, its market value “dropped to around $1.55 trillion,” reported Asia Times. That was bound to affect the Saudi government, which has no other real source of income.

Jordanian analyst Omar Ayasra told Al Jazeera that Saudi Arabia has lost billions due to its policy of saturating the oil market. He stressed that there would be a price to pay for this and the losses in the international markets and their consequences.

Last week, Bloomberg reported that Saudi Arabia “will rely on the biggest debt programme since its debut in international bond markets in 2016 to absorb the shock to the budget from collapsing energy prices and cuts in oil output.” According to Saudi Finance Minister Mohammed Al-Jadaan, “The government is looking at additional spending cuts and may issue as much as an extra 100 billion riyals of debt on top of 120 billion riyals already announced.” At the same time, Al Jazeera reported that the Kingdom has introduced austerity measures to help prop up the deficit.

Reuters reported on 29 April that, “Saudi Arabia’s central bank foreign reserves fell in March at their fastest rate in at least 20 years and to their lowest since 2011, while the Kingdom slipped into a $9 billion budget deficit in the first quarter as oil revenues collapsed.”

READ: Covid-19 and the oil market crash spell the end for US hegemony and the petrodollar

The former Qatari Energy Minister Abdullah Al-Atiyyah told Al Jazeera last week that Saudi Arabia ignored the supply and demand rule when it started its oil price war. The country would “weep” as a result, he predicted.

Although Saudi Arabia and Russia agreed to cut 23 per cent of their oil supplies in early April, equivalent to around 10 per cent of global supply, it has not yet had the desired effect. The Saudis are the bigger losers in this, because they lack other sources of income, while Russia has several alternatives, including gas. “Russia is in much better economic shape than Saudi to handle any shocks to its oil-related streams of revenue,” explained Oil Price.

Flooding the market with oil has backfired on Saudi Arabia. This suggests that de facto ruler Crown Prince Mohammad Bin Salman lacks the expertise and experience to handle such a crisis. Things are going to get a whole lot worse for him if Donald Trump goes ahead and basically scraps the 1945 deal which underpins the relationship between Saudi Arabia and the US and could see the US withdrawing its military protection of the Kingdom. If the US does withdraw its troops from Saudi Arabia, what will it do about Iran? If Aramco facilities are attacked and oil production is paralysed again, how will the Kingdom defend itself? Bin Salman has the future of the Kingdom in his hands.

Abdullah Al-Atiyyah believes that Saudi Arabia does not learn from its mistakes, so is destined to suffer more losses. It is unlikely to have many sympathisers apart from those foreign governments who have signed massive arms deals with the Kingdom. And possibly the supporters of Newcastle United Football Club, which its sovereign wealth fund is trying to buy for £300 million.

Moving from the rich list to the poorest list not only suggests that bankruptcy is a very real possibility, but also that Saudi Arabia is suffering from serious mismanagement at the very top. For a country blessed with such natural wealth, that is the real crying shame.

The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Monitor.

https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/20200501-mismanagement-is-driving-saudi-arabia-towards-bankruptcy/

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Showcasing the obsession of yours further by posting fairytale stories full of lies and desperate exaggerations from propaganda mouthpieces such as Muslim Brotherhood and Qatari regime owned Middle East Monitor?:sarcastic:

KSA has been declared "bankrupt" (a state/country cannot go bankrupt technically but whatever) 1 billion times in the past 8 decades if not more. Each time the country has emerged only stronger. Now what makes you think that KSA as of 2020 with MBS in power and a total removal of most of the idiotic laws in place and KSA opening up to the world full scale will be worse? Oil, gas, petrochemical sector, minerals, renewables etc. are going nowhere it is what keeps the world "alive" so to speak. Not to mention that our non-oil sector has been booming in recent years.

The oil price has been lower in the past and KSA survived fine in a much worse position than today.


In the real world KSA is one of the few countries in the world that are best prepared to come out successfully once the global financial crisis ends by virtue of KSA's almost non-existent debt, enormous sovereign wealth funds, enormous investments abroad and the trillions upon trillions of USD worth of hydrocarbons, mineral wealth and one of the largest renewables energy potentials in the world as well as a booming tourist sector (KSA is already in the top 15 of most visited countries in the world and that was while KSA had no tourist visa and only due to religious tourism and business visas) etc.

A country close to "bankruptcy" would not be donating 500 million USD to the WHO to combat the COVID-19 nor making billion USD big investments in the middle of a global financial crisis.


Why don't you stick to posting more propaganda threads such as "Trump threatening to nuke KSA", "MBS was taken aback and almost collapsed when hearing Trumps words" and other similar nonsense threads posted on PDF lately? This never gets old.:lol:

In the midst of a global financial criss, where literally 95% of the world's countries are in a worse position than KSA, this troll (that called for the genocide of 500 million Arabs earlier today) is busy posting his Middle East Monitor fairytales. I challenge you to find a single positive KSA story from that Middle East Monitor propaganda central.
 
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Showcasing the obsession of yours further by posting fairytale stories full of lies and desperate exaggerations from propaganda mouthpieces such as Muslim Brotherhood and Qatari regime owned Middle East Monitor?:sarcastic:

KSA has been declared "bankrupt" (a state/country cannot go bankrupt technically but whatever) 1 billion times in the past 8 decades if not more. Each time the country has emerged only stronger. Now what makes you think that KSA as of 2020 with MBS in power and a total removal of most of the idiotic laws in place and KSA opening up to the world full scale will be worse? Oil, gas, petrochemical sector, minerals etc. are going nowhere it is what keeps the world "alive" so to speak. Not to mention that our non-oil sector has been booming in recent years.

The oil price has been lower in the past and KSA survived fine in a much worse position than today.


In the real world KSA is one of the few countries in the world that are best prepared to come out successfully once the global financial crisis ends by virtue of KSA's almost non-existent debt, enormous sovereign wealth funds, enormous investments abroad and the trillions upon trillions of USD worth of hydrocarbons, mineral wealth and one of the largest renewables energy potentials in the world as well as a booming tourist sector (KSA is already in the top 15 of most visited countries in the world and that was while KSA had no tourist visa and only due to religious tourism and business visas) etc.

A country close to "bankruptcy" would not be donating 500 million USD to the WHO to combat the COVID-19 nor making billion USD big investments in the middle of a global financial crisis.


Why don't you stick to posting more propaganda threads such as "Trump threatening to nuke KSA", "MBS was taking a back and almost collapsed when hearing Trumps words" and other similar nonsense threads posted on PDF lately? This never gets old.:lol:

In the midst of a global financial criss, where literals 95% of the world's countries are in a worse position than KSA, this troll (that called for the genocide of 500 million Arabs earlier today) is busy posting his Middle East Monitor fairytales. I challenge you to find a single positive KSA story from that Middle East Monitor propaganda central.

Here i will post your own state controlled media quoting things are not looking peachy.

https://www.arabnews.com/node/1666651/business-economy

Not looking good monkey. There is nothing positive about you country to speak off. It heading for a crash. Your government is basically feeding you lies after lies. Its gotten to a point where guys can't come out of your bubble.

Hey look even Bloombery who is talking about moody is faking it.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...-to-negative-at-moody-s-after-reserves-tumble

Quickly back to the bubble.
 
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Here i will post your own state controlled media quoting things are not looking peachy.

https://www.arabnews.com/node/1666651/business-economy

Not looking good monkey.

Donkey, did you expect the first quarter of 2020 to be a positive budget for any country in the world amidst this global financial crisis and complete lockdown due to COVID-19?:lol: You are even dumber than I thought.

KSA's budget for 2020 was the biggest in history when it was announced in December of 2019 (hardly the sign of a country at the verge of "bankruptcy") and 40% of the budget was non-oil derived (38% to be exact). Not many years ago such a number would be unthinkable. Which proves that things are moving in the right direction despite overall low oil prices in the past 5-6 years.

https://us-sabc.org/saudi-arabias-2020-budget-review/

https://home.kpmg/sa/en/home/insights/2019/12/kingdom-of-saudi-arabia-2020-budget-report.html

BTW care to tell me how well the Pakistani economy is doing in comparison since you started "worrying" about KSA of all countries in the world? I suggest spending your energy on something more useful, KSA will be fine as usual like proven after every crisis to date.
 
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Donkey, did you expect the first quarter of 2020 to be a positive budget for any country in the world amidst this global financial crisis and complete lockdown due to COVID-19?:lol: You are even dumber than I thought.

KSA's budget for 2020 was the biggest in history when it was announced in December of 2019 (hardly the sign of a country at the verge of "bankruptcy") and 40% of the budget was non-oil derived (38% to be exact). Not many years ago such a number would be unthinkable. Which proves that things are moving in the right direction despite overall low oil prices in the past 5-6 years.

https://us-sabc.org/saudi-arabias-2020-budget-review/

https://home.kpmg/sa/en/home/insights/2019/12/kingdom-of-saudi-arabia-2020-budget-report.html

BTW care to tell me how well the Pakistani economy is doing in comparison since you started "worrying" about KSA of all countries in the world? I suggest spending your energy on something more useful, KSA will be fine as usual like proven after every crisis to date.


This was a long time thing. Back in 2019.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...-for-saudi-arabia-to-02-from-19-idUSKBN1WU22J

2020 GDP is forcasted to be -2.283% things are not looking Good.

https://www.ceicdata.com/en/indicator/saudi-arabia/forecast-real-gdp-growth

Even IMF is lying. Quick back to the bubble.
 
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MBS is like a curse on saudis. All actions he has taken brought KSA to its knees and first time KSA will take Debt to bridge gap for budget. MBS is unrivaled in one thing in which even his predecessors couldn't compete which is pure arrogance and sense of entitlement. Yet all it took one phone call from trump to cut oil production shows lot about what he is really deep inside. KSA really needs someone with Balls if it wishes to survive in next couple of decades.
 
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This was a long time thing. Back in 2019.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...-for-saudi-arabia-to-02-from-19-idUSKBN1WU22J

2020 GDP is forcasted to be -2.283% things are not looking Good.

https://www.ceicdata.com/en/indicator/saudi-arabia/forecast-real-gdp-growth

Even IMF is lying. Quick back to the bubble.

Mate one thing you should know that you can never argue with people of KSA and Iran about their dear Monarchs. When presented with facts they accuse and abuse you for pointing out plain simple facts. I would wait 2 more comments and you will get your answer.
 
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This was a long time thing. Back in 2019.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...-for-saudi-arabia-to-02-from-19-idUSKBN1WU22J

2020 GDP is forcasted to be -2.283% things are not looking Good.

https://www.ceicdata.com/en/indicator/saudi-arabia/forecast-real-gdp-growth

Even IMF is lying. Quick back to the bubble.

IMF is not some holy grail and I prefer looking at the actual 2020 budget published in December of 2019, not some useless article posted in October of 2019 that proved to be wrong.

Forecasts are estimates. You missed the "holy grail" IMF's prediction in 2021 which overall puts KSA in the plus for both 2020 and 2021.
Further embarrassment for you.

https://www.ceicdata.com/en/indicator/saudi-arabia/forecast-real-gdp-growth

MBS is like a curse on saudis. All actions he has taken brought KSA to its knees and first time KSA will take Debt to bridge gap for budget. MBS is unrivaled in one thing in which even his predecessors couldn't compete which is pure arrogance and sense of entitlement. Yet all it took one phone call from trump to cut oil production shows lot about what he is really deep inside. KSA really needs someone with Balls if it wishes to survive in next couple of decades.

Nonsense. MBS has been a blessing for KSA in every way (those actually living in KSA will agree - vast majority) and the ground realities as well.

As for your baseless "Trump claim" this makes zero sense.

The article suggests that KSA was used and forced. However, that was not true, not even one bit. Here is a quote: "The prospect of losing U.S. military protection made the royal family “bend at the knees” and bow to Trump’s demands, a Middle Eastern diplomat told Reuters."

What actually happened?

Key information:


- There are three players, KSA, Russia, and the U.S

- OPEC+ includes OPEC members and others, such as Russia

- Both Russia and the. U.S are not members of OPEC

- Oil demand declined because of COVID-19, and KSA wanted to cut - down production to maintain a reasonable price

- Although they had an agreement (KSA and Russia), Russia refused to cut down its production

- The U.S actually increased its production to take advantage of the situation

- The U.S has always acted independently because they believe that it is a free market and there should never be such agreements

- KSA got a bit mad and said, alright.

- KSA increased its production to bring Russia back to the table

- Oil price went down

-
-
What happened to the free market talking? Well....


- However, On Apr 13, 2020, they (INCLUDING the U.S) reached an agreement to cut down production

The article: A negative story about KSA

Reality: KSA disciplined two amateur players, and DID NOT cut its production down until they reached an agreement.

No need to "worry" either. KSA is going nowhere.

Mate one thing you should know that you can never argue with people of KSA and Iran about their dear Monarchs. When presented with facts they accuse and abuse you for pointing out plain simple facts. I would wait 2 more comments and you will get your answer.

Another genius. So a guy that starts the insulting by calling me a monkey, which you ignore completely, and now you are crying about me putting his nonsense apart and using his own "sources" against him?

PDF.:lol:

Anyway have fun in your fairytale thread and echo chamber. I am out.

@Mr Freeman nobody denied that there is a global financial crisis unfolding, moron.

Now take a look at this list and keep crying.

Emerging economies around the world ranked on their financial strength

May 2nd 2020


20200502_BBC380.png


https://www.economist.com/briefing/2020/05/02/which-emerging-markets-are-in-most-financial-peril
 
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Mate one thing you should know that you can never argue with people of KSA and Iran about their dear Monarchs. When presented with facts they accuse and abuse you for pointing out plain simple facts. I would wait 2 more comments and you will get your answer.

Its fun. This @ArabianEmpires&Caliphates is so far up in his bubble its laughable. Never seen such level of stupidity. Well actually i have, most of these Arab are like that. Fingers in ears, eyes closed.

Here is even more proof from HIS STATE CONTROLLED MEDIA that he still can't digest

https://saudigazette.com.sa/article...ps-ahead-to-fight-economic-downturn-Al-Jadaan
 
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Let me remind my country fellows that Saudi economy going down the drain(if true though highly unlikely) is extremely bad news for Pakistan keeping in mind all different factors, be them million plus of employed Pakistanis there or their remittance back home to millions of families which also helps our forex + constant uninterrupted supply of oil, sometimes on deferred payments + their aid/loans + their investments in Pakistan.
 
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Latest data show, remittance from KSA is same level as per UK and USA. In fact, in 2019 UAE was bigger remittance source then Saudi.

Remittance is just one factor. You conveniently forgot to address other factors.

Even in case of remittance, do you have any other place in mind to employ all those million and half Pakistanis either in Pakistan or in some other other country?

The other part of your comment which I didn't even quote is blatant racism/bigotry. You do realize many people could say the same about anyone or everyone including us? Delete that part if possible.

Anyway, this is your example:

pmp8fb5b8897b7b282d7a88292e2dbedaf1.jpg
 
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Remittance is just one factor. You conveniently forgot to address other factors.

Even in case of remittance, do you have any other place in mind to employ all those million and half Pakistanis either in Pakistan or in some other other country?

The other part of your comment which I didn't even quote is blatant racism/bigotry. You do realize many people could say the same about anyone or everyone including us? Delete that part if possible.

Anyway, this is your example:

View attachment 629202

The number of Pakistan in KSA has reduced a lot in the last 5 years. Over half a million Pakistan have left KSA. From 2.1 million we are down to 1.55 million. Even nowadays manpower export to Gulf has dropped a lot in 2019, and will continue to do so.

https://www.thenews.com.pk/print/48...-manpower-export-to-saudi-arabia-uae-observed

Nothing wrong with that comment. 9/11 attackers were Saudi. OBL was Saudi. Mastermind of 9/11 Saudi, etc. These people carried out attacks, and in retaliation, Muslim everywhere in the world got blamed. Our country suffered more, with these extremist school they exported. Just cause these terrorist have money, they can go around buying media to prevent their crimes from coming to the surface.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/blog...companies-partnering-with-a-saudi-conference/

We shouldn't be sacred of them nor should we stop exposing these terrorist.

Look at the way this monkey above replies. Zero manners, thinks he owns the world. This is the mentality of all Arabs. If your facts don't match with his bubble, he resorts abuse and then plays the victim. Somebody needs to call out this terrorist here.

Have a look at how these terrorist truly feel about Pakistan.

https://www.firstpost.com/world/dub...elations-with-saudi-led-gcc-bloc-4418471.html

http://csef.ru/en/politica-i-geopol...rt-gvadar-ugrozhaet-regionalnoj-roli-oae-8202

They are ready to spill Pakistani blood for their people. Thousands dead cause of these attacks sponsored by these terrorist. They feel zero remorse for their action.
 
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. .
Mismanagement is driving Saudi Arabia towards bankruptcy
May 1, 2020 at 11:31 am | Published in: Article, International Organisations, Middle East, OPEC, Opinion, Saudi Arabia
2016_10-3-saudi-riyalGettyImages-612133560.jpg

A man counts Saudi riyal banknotes at a market in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia on 3 October 2016 [Fayez Nurdeline /AFP/Getty Images]
motasem-dalloul-e1478711188771.jpg

Motasem A Dalloul
@abujomaaGaza
May 1, 2020 at 11:31 am
On 6 March, the OPEC+ cartel failed to agree on a cut in oil production in the light of reduced demand due to the coronavirus pandemic affecting almost every country in the world. All of this came in the middle of a global financial crisis. Saudi Arabia proposed the cut, and OPEC members accepted it, but Russia, which is OPEC’s “+”, spearheaded the call to reject it.

“We have made this decision because no consensus has been found of how all the 24 countries should simultaneously react to the current situation,” Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak told reporters after the OPEC+ meeting in Vienna. “So as from April 1, we are starting to work without minding the quotas or reductions which were in place earlier, but this does not mean that each country would not monitor and analyse market developments.” Hours later, oil prices plummeted.

In retaliation for Russia’s rejection of the production cut, Saudi Arabia “started the oil price war” by cutting prices the most for at least 20 years. Two days after OPEC’s break with Russia, Bloomberg reported that the energy giant Saudi Aramco was “offering unprecedented discounts in Asia, Europe and the US to entice refiners to use Saudi crude.” On 6 March, the price of a barrel of crude oil was trading in international markets at around $45.55; by 9 March, it was just $31.29 a barrel, and fell as much as 30 per cent at one point.

“This has turned into a scorched Earth approach by Saudi Arabia, in particular, to deal with the problem of chronic overproduction,” John Kilduff, founding partner of Again Capital, told CNBC. The Saudi-Russian oil price war continued until Brent crude traded at $15.97 a barrel on 22 April and West Texas Intermediate traded at minus $40 a barrel on 21 April.

READ: What impact will the oil price crash have on the Arab world?

The situation angered US President Donald Trump who was under pressure from American oil producers facing huge losses. He looked for ways to end the crisis, including the taboo of increasing prices in America.

Trump’s administration was ready to support an OPEC+ agreement to reduce output to boost prices, and he threatened to impose import tariffs on foreign crude to protect energy workers and domestic oil companies if no deal was reached. “I’ll do whatever I have to do,” said the US President. American companies and jobs have to be protected. However, imposing tariffs meant that he would make the oil exporters, including Saudi Arabia, bear the losses of the US oil companies and pay for the workers who lost their jobs. Trump insisted that he would have Russia and Saudi Arabia “destroy themselves” if they do not end the price war by reducing output.

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Saudi Arabia slips into destruction – Cartoon [Sabaaneh/MiddleEastMonitor]

Domestically, Saudi Arabia was damaged by its own policy of saturating the market with very low price oil which broke the basic supply and demand rule of economics. Aramco was classified by Forbes as the world’s most profitable oil company with a daily income of over $1 billion before the slump. A few days after flooding the market with oil, its market value “dropped to around $1.55 trillion,” reported Asia Times. That was bound to affect the Saudi government, which has no other real source of income.

Jordanian analyst Omar Ayasra told Al Jazeera that Saudi Arabia has lost billions due to its policy of saturating the oil market. He stressed that there would be a price to pay for this and the losses in the international markets and their consequences.

Last week, Bloomberg reported that Saudi Arabia “will rely on the biggest debt programme since its debut in international bond markets in 2016 to absorb the shock to the budget from collapsing energy prices and cuts in oil output.” According to Saudi Finance Minister Mohammed Al-Jadaan, “The government is looking at additional spending cuts and may issue as much as an extra 100 billion riyals of debt on top of 120 billion riyals already announced.” At the same time, Al Jazeera reported that the Kingdom has introduced austerity measures to help prop up the deficit.

Reuters reported on 29 April that, “Saudi Arabia’s central bank foreign reserves fell in March at their fastest rate in at least 20 years and to their lowest since 2011, while the Kingdom slipped into a $9 billion budget deficit in the first quarter as oil revenues collapsed.”

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The former Qatari Energy Minister Abdullah Al-Atiyyah told Al Jazeera last week that Saudi Arabia ignored the supply and demand rule when it started its oil price war. The country would “weep” as a result, he predicted.

Although Saudi Arabia and Russia agreed to cut 23 per cent of their oil supplies in early April, equivalent to around 10 per cent of global supply, it has not yet had the desired effect. The Saudis are the bigger losers in this, because they lack other sources of income, while Russia has several alternatives, including gas. “Russia is in much better economic shape than Saudi to handle any shocks to its oil-related streams of revenue,” explained Oil Price.

Flooding the market with oil has backfired on Saudi Arabia. This suggests that de facto ruler Crown Prince Mohammad Bin Salman lacks the expertise and experience to handle such a crisis. Things are going to get a whole lot worse for him if Donald Trump goes ahead and basically scraps the 1945 deal which underpins the relationship between Saudi Arabia and the US and could see the US withdrawing its military protection of the Kingdom. If the US does withdraw its troops from Saudi Arabia, what will it do about Iran? If Aramco facilities are attacked and oil production is paralysed again, how will the Kingdom defend itself? Bin Salman has the future of the Kingdom in his hands.

Abdullah Al-Atiyyah believes that Saudi Arabia does not learn from its mistakes, so is destined to suffer more losses. It is unlikely to have many sympathisers apart from those foreign governments who have signed massive arms deals with the Kingdom. And possibly the supporters of Newcastle United Football Club, which its sovereign wealth fund is trying to buy for £300 million.

Moving from the rich list to the poorest list not only suggests that bankruptcy is a very real possibility, but also that Saudi Arabia is suffering from serious mismanagement at the very top. For a country blessed with such natural wealth, that is the real crying shame.

The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Monitor.

https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/20200501-mismanagement-is-driving-saudi-arabia-towards-bankruptcy/

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Sooner or later S.A will fall. It has no future. This decision has made in Washington and Brussel. Even Moscow has agreed.
 
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