Saudi stock market dives, crude futures to jump after drone attack on oil plants
Saudi
Arabia’s stock market fell by 2.3% at Sunday’s open as the country grappled
with weekend drone attacks on the heart of its oil production facilities in
Abqaiq and Khurais claimed by Yemen’s Houthi rebels. Reports that the country
may take weeks to return to full oil supply capacity is set to send crude
futures up by as much as $10 per barrel, analysts say, depending on the scale
of the damage. Half the country’s oil production was halted due to fire damage
and an assessment of the situation is due on Monday, Saudi energy ministry
officials said. They have not yet offered a timeline on full production
restoration. “A small $2-$3 premium would emerge if the damage appears to be an
issue that can be resolved quickly, and $10 if the damage to Aramco’s
facilities is significant leading to prolonged supply outages,” Ayham Kamel,
practice head for the Middle East and North Africa at Eurasia group, said in a
research note Sunday. That’s up to 25 cents higher per gallon of gasoline.
Saudi Arabia Drones Attack Oil Production 190915 EC Smoke billows from the
Abqaiq, Saudi Arabia crude processing facility after drone strikes Saturday,
Sept. 14, 2019 Satellite imagery courtesy of Planet Labs Abqaiq, in the
kingdom’s eastern province, is the world’s largest oil processing facility and
crude oil stabilization plant with a processing capacity of more than 7 million
barrels per day (bpd). Khurais is the second largest oil field in the country
with a capacity to pump around 1.5 million bpd. Saturday’s attack is the
biggest on Saudi oil infrastructure since Saddam Hussein’s invasion of Kuwait
in 1990, when the Iraqi military fired scud missiles into the kingdom. “Oil
prices will surely spike on the news of the attacks when markets open on
Sunday,” Joseph McMonigle, an energy analyst at Hedgeye Research and former
chief of staff at the U.S. Department of Energy, wrote in a client note. “In
our view, there is almost no geopolitical risk priced into oil markets that are
focused solely on the macro and trade narratives.” If the Saudis maintain
closure of half its production, it would impact nearly 5 million barrels of
crude production a day, roughly 5% of the world’s daily oil production. In
August, Saudi Arabia produced 9.85 million bpd, according to the latest figures
from the U.S. Energy Information Administration. Saudi Aramco President and CEO
Amin Nasser said no one was hurt in the attacks and emergency crews have
contained the fires and brought the situation under control. What Riyadh has
called a terrorist attack on its state oil giant, Saudi Aramco, is also likely
to unsettle future shareholders and market participants ahead of the company’s
highly anticipated initial public offering (IPO). “Very hard to overstate the
seriousness of the attacks, especially on Abqaiq. It is the nerve center of the
country’s energy infrastructure,” Helima Croft, global head of commodity strategy
at RBC Capital Markets, told CNBC on Saturday. “Even if exports resume in the
next 24 to 48 hours, the image of invulnerability has been erased.” While
Yemen’s Houthi rebels, who have been at war with the Saudis since 2015, claimed
the attack, numerous officials and analysts point to Tehran. U.S. Secretary of
State Mike Pompeo via Twitter blamed Iran for the attack, saying “Iran has now
launched an unprecedented attack on the world’s energy supply. There is no
evidence the attacks came from Yemen.” Iran responded by calling the
allegations “pointless.” Security experts say the attack likely came from an
Iranian-backed militant group in Iraq. Baghdad on Sunday afternoon denied its
territory was involved in any way. The Houthis have been behind numerous
attacks on Saudi infrastructure in recent years, but they were not viewed as
serious by the market, McMonigle said. This time, the attacks — regardless
of their source — are impossible to ignore.