EFTA01458290.pdf

DataSet-10 1 page 542 words document
👁 1 💬 0
📄 Extracted Text (542 words)
1 September 2015 Special Report: The treat Accumulation' Is Over: FX Reserves Have Peaked. Beware OT with a stronger broad dollar. 12m forwards give some indication of this pressure on the the dirham and particularly rival pegs over the past fortnight (Figure 21l We expect Middle Eastern governments to continue to lose significant reserves in the coming months. Low oil prices are only one ingredient in the mix. The exacerbating factor is our economists' prediction that the main dollar pegs in Saudi and the UAE will hold, albeit at considerable costs in terms of reserves.4 One reason for our economists' confidence in the pegs is that both governments can afford to withstand the pressure. They note that Saudi FX reserves have fallen by 10% since last September but remain abundant at $665bn, roughly 100% of GDP. As shown by Figure 21, pressure on the Saudi peg was also considerable in 1998 when FX reserves amounted to a third of today's stocks and government debt, now negligible, stood at 100% of GDP. And yet the peg held. Nor is there a compelling macroeconomic incentive for SAMA to devalue. Given the economy's export dependency on oil, which is invoiced in USD, a weaker riyal would not make it significantly more competitive. The net effect would be negative due to higher import prices. The same arguments can be made more forcefully for the UAE, which retains even greater assets and a stronger fiscal position. Hence, until oil prices recover meaningfully, both governments and central banks will likely continue to bleed fast. !Figure 21: SAR and AED dollar peas have lately come under haun? 22: Saudi-Arabia requires an oil price above $100 to considerable prez :re from low oil prices iplug budget deficits 12,, FWD Sid USD bbl SAR AID Dubai crude spot PM —Brent points 603 140 120 120 Buccal breakewn 400 pace /1 120 100 100 L ila% -200 4(30 400 400 N .,A 44,I AO „ ;VI viv . yis i t ] y'•7 i11'• Ye • 100 50 60 Bo. Go 40 i1 2 /11 ao 0 20 -LOCO r V -1200 2004 2012 2014 20 20 4-- 0 2006 NOB 2010 TC03 2005 2007 2000 2011 2013 2015f Savic• Amu?* Bon. ave, twg PAW.ti &v.v. twelve* Be*. 84,4vntsv Feint', ZP If oil prices do recover in the medium term, pressure on the pegs would naturally diminish. Our economists note, however, that Saudi public spending has increased by about 10% a year over the past decade. This has lifted the oil price needed to balance the budget from $25/bbl in 2004 to 8105/bbl (Figure 22/. This may be reduced with government spending cuts. Yet it seems unlikely that the budget breakeven will fall back to levels seen in the 2000s. Unless oil prices rise to unprecedented levels, therefore, OPEC reserve accumulation is unlikely to return to the run rate of the past decade. The more realistic baseline is that, over time, OPEC countries will slowly burn reserves. ` Robert Burgess. is the Saudi nyal the next currency peg to break?", DB Global Markets Research. 14 August 2019 httpfipue.dbgmresearch.oxn(cce-bnfpuil/DocPulf1004- g4A7/85109503/0B SoecialRecart 2015-08-21 0900b8c08al 4294b oar Page 12 Deutsche Bank AG/London CONFIDENTIAL — PURSUANT TO FED. R. CRIM. P. 6(e) DB-SDNY-0118144 CONFIDENTIAL SDNY_GM_00264328 EFTA01458290
ℹ️ Document Details
SHA-256
9bde0229ff737d7c98d3052eef2186a4e91e10c30e0323c33b60976d6b2e1810
Bates Number
EFTA01458290
Dataset
DataSet-10
Type
document
Pages
1

Community Rating

Sign in to rate this document

📋 What Is This?

Loading…
Sign in to add a description

💬 Comments 0

Sign in to join the discussion
Loading comments…
Link copied!