Oil outlook could challenge Guyana's policy capacity

Subject Oil development in Guyana. Significance In 2017 ExxonMobil announced the development of a major offshore oil find in Guyana. The news has been welcomed in Guyana, but there are concerns about the potential impact that developing significant oil production will have on the country’s economy, society and environment. Impacts This development and future oil advances could attract foreign investment if the international oil price remains near current levels. The prospect of Guyana becoming a successful oil producer/exporter will be a source of tension with Venezuela. Transparency and effective economic management may prove difficult to achieve. The fluctuating oil price will affect governments’ ability to budget effectively.

Significance A fiscal crunch exacerbated by the pandemic and associated oil-price crash has forced the authorities to step up long-term ‘Omanisation’ efforts, ultimately taking pressure off the bloated public sector wage bill. This comes as Sultan Haitham bin Tariq Al Said, one year into his reign, launches a raft of new political, military and economic initiatives. Impacts Oman will remain compliant with OPEC+ oil production cuts. The sultanate will boost output at its competitive giant Ghazeer and Khazzan gas fields in Block 61 to benefit from high prices. Muscat will prioritise agriculture, fisheries and logistics for non-oil growth but struggle to secure project financing post-pandemic.


2016 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 64-79 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aktham Maghyereh ◽  
Basel Awartani

Purpose This paper aims to examine the impact of oil price uncertainty on the stock market returns of ten oil importing and exporting countries in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region. The sample contains both oil importing and oil exporting countries that depend heavily on oil production and exports. Design/methodology/approach This paper intuitively applies the generalized autoregressive conditional heteroskedasticity (GARCH)-in-mean vector autoregression (VAR) model using weekly data over the period January 2001-February 2014. Findings The findings indicate that oil uncertainty matters in the determination of real stock returns. There is a negative and significant relationship between oil price uncertainty and real stock returns in all countries in the sample. The influence of oil price risk is more serious in those economies that depend heavily on oil revenues to grow. Practical implications The findings have important implications. For instance, managers should be aware of the linkages between oil price uncertainty and equity returns when they use oil to hedge and diversify equities, particularly in economies where oil is important for economic growth. The policymakers in oil importing countries should encourage companies to improve efficiency in the usage of energy and to resort to alternative sources to avoid fluctuations in earnings and equity prices. In the countries that heavily depend on oil efforts should focus on diversifying the domestic economy away from oil to protect against oil price fluctuations. Originality/value To the best of our knowledge, this is the first attempt to study the influence of oil price uncertainty in the MENA region. The sample contains both oil importing and oil exporting countries that depend heavily on oil production and exports. The empirical findings of the paper have valuable policy implications for investors, market participants and policymakers.


Subject The institutional challenges of an oil bonanza. Significance With the ExxonMobil-led consortium firming up plans to begin oil production in 2020, attention has turned to the readiness of Guyana’s domestic institutions to provide adequate monitoring and oversight of the group’s operations. Impacts Doubts over institutional quality will continue to dog the authorities and the credibility of government oversight. Both oil development and the rise of new regulatory bodies will strain the supply of qualified labour, hitting job markets. The government will struggle to channel the expected boom in revenues effectively.


Subject Management of South Sudan's economy Significance A framework peace agreement reached in Khartoum on June 27 comprised only five substantive articles; it was therefore striking that one focused on re-starting oil production. The potential -- and the desire -- for economic recovery are real, but turning potential into actual development and growth will require more than just getting the oil flowing again. Impacts Attempts to strengthen oilfield security in Unity State could trigger new fighting. Unity’s oilfields could potentially add 70,000 barrels per day by the end of 2019. Foreign investment inflows will remain minimal in the short-to-medium term.


Significance A key factor in determining the prospects for Brazil's fragile economy is the state of its huge oil industry. This is dominated by Petrobras, itself beset by problems arising from the ongoing 'Car Wash' corruption scandal, low international oil prices and massive debts. New legislation liberalising access to the huge pre-salt offshore oil resources has finally been passed by both houses of Congress. Impacts Whatever legislative and executive moves are made, the international oil price will remain an exogenous variable. This will have the potential to affect oil industry developments in Brazil either negatively or positively. The 'Car Wash' scandal will continue, affecting both Petrobras's operational capability and international investor interest.


2020 ◽  
Vol 14 (4) ◽  
pp. 729-744 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sam O. Olofin ◽  
Tirimisiyu Folorunsho Oloko ◽  
Kazeem O. Isah ◽  
Ahamuefula Ephraim Ogbonna

Purpose The purpose of this study is to investigate the predictability of crude oil price and shale oil production, in a bid to examine the possibility of bi-directional causality. Design/methodology/approach The study adopts a recently developed predictability model by Westerlund and Narayan (2015), which accounts for persistence, endogeneity and heteroscedasticity. It also accounts for structural breaks in the predictive models. Findings The empirical results show that only a unidirectional causal relationship from crude oil price to shale oil production exists. This happens as crude oil price appears to be a good predictor of shale oil production; however, shale oil production does not serve as a good predictor for crude oil price. Accounting for structural break was found to improve the predictability and forecast accuracy of the predictive model. Our result is robust to choice of crude oil price benchmarks (West Texas Intermediate, Brent, Dubai Fateh and Refiners’ Acquisition Cost) and their denominations (real or nominal). Research limitations/implications The result implies that crude oil price must be considered when predicting shale oil production. Meanwhile, the non-significance of shale of production in crude oil price predictive model provides information to potential analyst, researchers and countries predicting crude oil price that failure to account for the effect of shale oil production would not have significant impact on the forecast accuracy of their models. Originality/value The study contributes originally to the literature on crude oil price–shale oil production in four major ways. First, it applies a recently developed predictability method by Westerlund and Narayan (2015), which is more suitable for dealing with persistence, conditional heteroscedasticity and endogeneity in the predictors. Second, it investigates existence of reverse causality between crude oil price and shale oil production. Third, it examines the variation in the response and effect of four major crude oil price benchmarks. Fourth, it considers crude oil price in both real and nominal terms.


Significance Iran has agreed to restrict its nuclear programme in return for the lifting of sanctions, including on its oil and financial sectors. However, prices recovered slightly after the realisation that sanctions would take time to be lifted following the conclusion of a final agreement expected by June 30. Impacts Iranian oil production and export will increase by some 0.8 million b/d over a 6-9 month period from the start of the deal's implementation. Sanctions on Iran's repatriation of oil earnings would be lifted or suspended by US presidential waiver. Iran would seek foreign investment into its oil industry to sustain and increase production in the longer term. Increased oil exports could raise an additional 9.2 billion dollars in revenues in 2016. Saudi Arabia would avoid making production cuts in a bid to retain market share.


Author(s):  
Christine Shearer

The ongoing, large demand for oil in the United States has helped push oil companies from onshore to offshore, increasing the complexity of the operations and the risks. This has been encouraged by US policy, which has historically encouraged an increase in both national oil demand and domestic oil production. This chapter focuses on expanded offshore oil drilling in the United States and its risks, highlighting the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil blowout. Such events are examples of explicitly “human-caused” disasters that nonetheless can be expected to increase as we resort to lower quality and harder to reach fossil fuels, offering an interesting example of Charles Perrow’s concept of “normal accidents.”


Subject The St Petersburg economic forum. Significance Digital technologies were discussed as Russia's economic future at the St Petersburg International Economic Forum (SPIEF) on June 1-3, but the bulk of commercial deals concerned the mainstay sector, oil and gas. The presence of US and other foreign companies bolstered the event's political message that Russia was not isolated despite Western sanctions. Impacts Despite greater optimism, modest economic recovery is vulnerable to oil price volatility. EU and especially US sanctions seem less likely to fall away than before, impeding foreign investment. Laws allowing the state to control the cyber sphere may dampen some investors' interest in digital sector investment.


Significance Admission to the group demonstrates international confidence in Costa Rica’s economic management, even as the government struggles with the prolonged negative impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic. OECD accession should provide an economic boost for Costa Rica, alongside domestic stimulus measures. Impacts The benefits of OECD membership will be felt well beyond the immediate post-pandemic period. OECD accession will help encourage more foreign investment into Costa Rica, potentially giving it advantages over neighbouring Panama. Costa Rican economic recovery may spur more migration from Nicaragua, especially if repression there worsens as November’s elections near.


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