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Saudi Arabia Seeks Up to $8 Billion Loan

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Saudi Arabia Seeks Up to $8 Billion Loan
Kingdom’s Finance Ministry is seeking new funding sources to plug a widening fiscal deficit
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Skyscrapers stand in the King Abdullah financial district in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. The kingdom depends on income from oil sales for a majority of its budget revenue. Photo: Bloomberg News

DUBAI—Saudi Arabia is looking to borrow up to $8 billion from international banks and also could issue foreign bonds, said people familiar with the matter, to plug the kingdom’s widening fiscal deficit from cheap oil.

Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Finance has asked foreign banks to submit proposals for the loan, which would be between $6 billion and $8 billion in size, two bankers who have seen the request told The Wall Street Journal. The ministry is expected to choose lenders within the next two weeks, one of the bankers said.

The country also is considering raising billions of additional dollars from an international bond offering after securing the loan, the bankers said. Officials at the ministry weren’t available for comment.

A foreign bank loan would be Saudi Arabia’s first international borrowing in more than a decade. The government’s interest in raising this capital is part of a broader effort to fortify its dollar reserves at a time when oil prices are down 64% from their 2014 peak, despite the recent rally that has lifted Brent crude prices above $41 a barrel on ICE Futures Europe, their highest level since early December.

Saudi Arabia also is weighing possibly listing part of its state oil giant, Saudi Arabian Oil Co., or Aramco, and it has considered creating a sovereign-wealth fund to invest some of its reserves more aggressively in hopes of generating higher returns, people familiar with the matter said.

The government’s plans for raising more foreign capital suggests Saudi Arabia is taking steps to ride out any extended period of low oil prices without having to limit production. Despite pressure from other members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries to cut back on output to boost oil prices, Saudi Arabia has held firm that it won’t do more than freeze production at current levels, which are near record output.

“I don’t think the Saudis needed to do this to make sure they could pay their bills,” said Larry Goldstein, a director of the Energy Policy Research Foundation, which receives funding from the oil industry. “This is just another piece of a very consistent strategy of being as efficient and cost effective as possible in a very difficult and uncertain environment.”

Saudi Arabia, among the world’s biggest oil producers, has benefited from high crude prices in the past decade to build about $600 billion in reserves. Last year, Saudi Arabia ran a record deficit of nearly $100 billion as crude prices tumbled by more than half since the middle of 2014. The country announced austerity measures for this year, including spending and subsidy cuts, and said it would consider privatizing state assets.

Ratings agency Standard & Poor’s Ratings Services last month cut Saudi Arabia’s sovereign credit rating, citing the impact of low oil prices on the country’s finances and economy. It forecasts average growth of 2% between 2016 and 2019, down from 3%. Moody’s Investors Service also recently put Saudi Arabia’s rating on review for a possible downgrade while it assesses the impact of the low oil prices.

“The amount of borrowing that is on Saudi Arabia’s balance sheet is effectively extremely low relative to its reserves and relative to its economy,” said Karim Awad, chief executive officer of EFG Hermes, one of the Middle East’s largest local investment banks, in a recent interview. “There’s a lot of room to borrow, and it will help the economy as a whole,” he said.

Saudi Arabia has issued domestic bonds worth tens of billions in recent months and tapped into its foreign reserves held by the central bank to bolster its finances.

Oman and Qatar, two other Persian Gulf states, have also recently secured international loans.
Saudi Arabia Seeks Up to $8 Billion Loan - WSJ
 
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How about not spending so much money on a war you can't seem to win? I mean, that's at least $3 dollars right there, you can probably buy like 9 samosas for that.

Seriously though, KSA will eventually have to change it's economic policies. It cannot continue its unaffordable subsidies, it must start taxing it's population.
 
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How about not spending so much money on a war you can't seem to win? I mean, that's at least $3 dollars right there, you can probably buy like 9 samosas for that.

Seriously though, KSA will eventually have to change it's economic policies. It cannot continue its unaffordable subsidies, it must start taxing it's population.

subsidy and public benefits program arevery popular measures. You just cannot stop them one fine day. As an interim measure, saudis should diversify their economy.
 
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Saudi needs to reduce its defense budget, subsidies need to be lifted and to compensate this, the Kingdom should open more freedom in its political side. More room for talented ordinary people to lead.
 
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How about not spending so much money on a war you can't seem to win? I mean, that's at least $3 dollars right there, you can probably buy like 9 samosas for that.

Seriously though, KSA will eventually have to change it's economic policies. It cannot continue its unaffordable subsidies, it must start taxing it's population.
This is just a propaganda news, recently KSA donated an African country 4 Billion USD military aid, same to Egypt and many other. now this fake news claiming they need 6 to 8 billions while they have Approx 350 + Billions funds available.
 
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Saudi Arabia is looking to borrow up to $8 billion from international banks and also could issue foreign bonds, said people familiar with the matter, to plug the kingdom’s widening fiscal deficit from cheap oil.
end of an epoch...
 
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They royals should just tax their population.......saudis are docile as you can get. Just get one of the clerics to fatwa it ;)
 
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Just do what everyone else does and tax your population, then you will have government revenue flowing out of your ears.
 
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Empire of sand. once the black gold stops flowing it'll be like Mad Max.
Not really, by the time 'black gold' ends - Saudi Arabia will have already be dependant on another source - just like UAE which only gains 4% of its revenue from oil.

And keep in mind; Saudi Arabia does not tax it's citizens.
 
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Not really, by the time 'black gold' ends - Saudi Arabia will have already be dependant on another source - just like UAE which only gains 4% of its revenue from oil.

And keep in mind; Saudi Arabia does not tax it's citizens.

Where you got the 4% figure from??

"Although UAE has the most diversified economy in the GCC, the UAE's economy remains extremely reliant on oil. With the exception of Dubai, most of the UAE is dependent on oil revenues. Petroleum and natural gascontinue to play a central role in the economy, especially in Abu Dhabi. More than 85% of the UAE's economy was based on the oil exports in 2009.[11][12] While Abu Dhabi and other UAE emirates have remained relatively conservative in their approach to diversification, Dubai, which has far smaller oil reserves, was bolder in its diversification policy.[13] In 2011, oil exports accounted for 77% of the UAE's state budget.[14]
 
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This is just a propaganda news, recently KSA donated an African country 4 Billion USD military aid, same to Egypt and many other. now this fake news claiming they need 6 to 8 billions while they have Approx 350 + Billions funds available.
Pakistan is donating $100 million dollars to Afghanistan, and it's also borrowing $500 million every 4-6 months.

Even if it's fake, it's not illogical or outside the realm of possibility.

subsidy and public benefits program arevery popular measures. You just cannot stop them one fine day. As an interim measure, saudis should diversify their economy.
I'm not saying that they do it over night, why does everyone assume that's what I'm saying, every time I suggest something?

Of course it'll take time, but they need to do it.
 
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Pakistan is donating $100 million dollars to Afghanistan, and it's also borrowing $500 million every 4-6 months.

Even if it's fake, it's not illogical or outside the realm of possibility.


I'm not saying that they do it over night, why does everyone assume that's what I'm saying, every time I suggest something?

Of course it'll take time, but they need to do it.
They have reserved 350 billions in cash...

They can simply earn 10 billions interest free just for pledging oil to any big oil company, why they need loan...
 
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They have reserved 350 billions in cash...
And? That's not how economies work. You don't tap into your reserve, because you wanna buy a shiny new tank, you tap into your reserves on an emergency basis. What is KSA's national budget? Government spending was $230 billion in 2015, do you really think that $350 billion is going to last long, with such huge spending?

They can simply earn 10 billions interest free just for pledging oil to any big oil company, why they need loan...
I don't know where you got that 10 billion from, but (again), that's not how economics works. The Saudis need to cut down their production, not increase it, because the more oil there is on the market, the less revenue the Saudis will earn. That $10 billion will quickly evaporate into nothing.

That being said, I don't understand the $8 dollar loan. Why do they need it? What is it for? It certainly can't be to bridge any gap to cover their expenditures, could it?
 
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Empire of sand. once the black gold stops flowing it'll be like Mad Max.

You don't know anything about SA. They have huge proven reserves of many things. They can use all these resources for next 500 years without doing anything.
 
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