US’s Saudi Oil Deal from Win-Win to Mega-Loose
By F. William Engdahl
August 10, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "NEO"
- Who
would’ve thought it would come to this? Certainly not the Obama
Administration, and their brilliant geo-political think-tank
neo-conservative strategists. John Kerry’s brilliant “win-win”
proposal of last September during his September 11 Jeddah meeting
with ailing Saudi King Abdullah was simple: Do a rerun of the highly
successful State Department-Saudi deal in 1986 when Washington
persuaded the Saudis to flood the world market at a time of
over-supply in order to collapse oil prices worldwide, a kind of
“oil shock in
reverse.” In 1986 was successful in helping to break the back of
a faltering Soviet Union highly dependent on dollar oil export
revenues for maintaining its grip on power.
So, though it was not
made public, Kerry and Abdullah agreed on September 11, 2014 that
the Saudis would use their oil muscle to bring Putin’s Russia to
their knees
today.
It seemed brilliant at
the time no doubt.
On the following day,
12 September 2014, the US Treasury’s aptly-named Office of Terrorism
and Financial Intelligence, headed by Treasury Under-Secretary David
S. Cohen, announced new sanctions against Russia’s energy giants
Gazprom, Gazprom Neft, Lukoil, Surgutneftgas and Rosneft. It forbid
US oil companies to participate with the Russian companies in joint
ventures for oil or gas offshore or in the
Arctic.
Then, just as the
ruble was rapidly falling and Russian major corporations were
scrambling for dollars for their year-end settlements, a collapse of
world oil prices would end Putin’s reign. That was clearly the
thinking of the hollowed-out souls who pass for statesmen in
Washington today. Victoria Nuland was jubilant, praising the
precision new financial warfare weapon at David Cohen’s Treasury
financial terrorism unit.
In July, 2014 West
Texas Intermediate, the benchmark price for US domestic oil pricing,
traded at $101 a barrel. The shale oil bonanza was booming, making
the US into a major oil player for the first time since the 1970’s.
When WTI hit $46 at
the beginning of January this year, suddenly things looked
different. Washington realized they had shot themselves in the foot.
They realized that the
over-indebted US shale oil industry was about to collapse under the
falling oil price. Behind the scenes Washington and Wall Street
colluded to artificially stabilize what then was an impending
chain-reaction bankruptcy collapse in the US shale oil industry. As
a result oil prices began a slow rise, hitting $53 in February. The
Wall Street and Washington propaganda mills began talking about the
end of falling oil prices. By May prices had crept up to $62 and
almost everyone was convinced oil recovery was in process. How wrong
they were.
Saudis not happy
Since that September
11 Kerry-Abdullah meeting (curious date to pick, given the climate
of suspicion that the Bush family is covering up involvement of the
Saudis in or around the events of September 11, 2001), the Saudis
have a new ageing King, Absolute Monarch and Custodian of the Two
Holy Mosques, King Salman, replacing the since deceased old ageing
King, Abdullah. However, the Oil Minister remains
unchanged—79-year-old Ali al-Naimi. It was al-Naimi who reportedly
saw the golden opportunity in the Kerry proposal to use the chance
to at the same time kill off the growing market challenge from the
rising output of the unconventional USA shale oil industry. Al-Naimi
has said repeatedly that he is determined to eliminate the US shale
oil “disturbance” to Saudi domination of world oil
markets.
Not only are the
Saudis unhappy with the US shale oil intrusion on their oily
Kingdom. They are more than upset with the recent deal the Obama
Administration made with Iran that will likely lead in several
months to lifting Iran economic sanctions. In fact the Saudis are
beside themselves with rage against Washington, so much so that they
have openly admitted an alliance with arch foe, Israel, to combat
what they see as the Iran growing dominance in the region—in Syria,
in Lebanon, in Iraq.
This has all added up
to an iron Saudi determination, aided by close Gulf Arab allies, to
further crash oil prices until the expected wave of shale oil
company bankruptcies—that was halted in January by Washington and
Wall Street manipulations—finishes off the US shale oil competition.
That day may come soon, but with unintended consequences for the
entire global financial system at a time such consequences can ill
be afforded.
According to a recent
report by Wall Street bank, Morgan Stanley, a major player in crude
oil markets, OPEC oil producers have been aggressively increasing
oil supply on the already glutted world market with no hint of a
letup. In its report Morgan Stanley noted with visible alarm, “OPEC
has added 1.5 million barrels/day to global supply in the last four
months alone…the oil market is currently 800,000 barrels/day
oversupplied. This suggests that the current oversupply in the oil
market is fully due to OPEC’s production increase since February
alone.”
The Wall Street bank
report adds the disconcerting note, “We anticipated that OPEC would
not cut, but we didn’t foresee such a sharp
increase.” In short, Washington has completely lost its
strategic leverage over Saudi Arabia, a Kingdom that had been
considered a Washington vassal ever since FDR’s deal to bring US oil
majors in on an exclusive basis in 1945.
That breakdown in
US-Saudi communication adds a new dimension to the recent June 18
high-level visit to St. Petersburg by Muhammad bin Salman, the Saudi
Deputy Crown Prince and Defense Minister and son of King Salman, to
meet President Vladimir Putin. The meeting was carefully prepared by
both sides as the two discussed up to $10 billion of trade deals
including Russian construction of peaceful nuclear power reactors in
the Kingdom and supplying of advanced Russian military equipment and
Saudi investment in Russia in agriculture, medicine, logistics,
retail and real estate. Saudi Arabia today is the world’s largest
oil producer and Russia a close
second. A Saudi-Russian alliance on whatever level was hardly in
the strategy book of the Washington State Department planners.…Oh
shit!
Now that OPEC oil glut
the Saudis have created has cracked the shaky US effort to push oil
prices back up. The price fall is being further fueled by fears that
the Iran deal will add even more to the glut, and that the world’s
second largest oil importer, China, may cut back imports or at least
not increase them as their economy slows down. The oil market time
bomb detonated in the last week of June. The US price of WTI oil
went from $60 a barrel then, a level at which at least many shale
oil producers can stay afloat a bit longer, to $49 on July 29, a
drop of more than 18% in four weeks, tendency down.
Morgan Stanley sounded
loud alarm bells, stating that if the trend of recent weeks
continues, “this downturn would be more severe than that in 1986. As
there was no sharp downturn in the 15 years before that, the current
downturn could be the worst of the last 45+ years. If this were to
be the case, there would be nothing in our experience that would be
a guide to the next phases of this cycle…In fact, there may be
nothing in analyzable history.”
‘October Surprise’
October is the next
key point for bank decisions to roll-over US shale company loans or
to keep extending credit on the (until now) hope that prices will
slowly recover. If as strongly hinted, the Federal Reserve hikes US
interest rates in September for the first time in the eight years
since the global financial crisis erupted in the US real estate
market in 2007, the highly-indebted US shale oil producers face
disaster of a new scale. Until the past few weeks the volume of US
shale oil production has remained at the maximum as shale producers
desperately try to maximize cash flow, ironically, laying the seeds
of the oil glut globally that will be their demise.
The reason US shale
oil companies have been able to continue in business since last
November and not declare bankruptcy is the ongoing Federal Reserve
zero interest rate policy that leads banks and other investors to
look for higher interest rates in the so-called “High Yield” bond
market.
Back in the 1980’s
when they were first created by Michael Millken and his fraudsters
at Drexel Burnham Lambert, Wall Street appropriately called them
“junk bonds” because when times got bad, like now for Shale
companies, they turned into junk. A recent UBS bank report states,
“the overall High-Yield market has doubled in size; sectors that
witnessed more buoyant issuance in recent years, like energy and
metals mining, have seen debt outstanding triple or
quadruple.”
Assuming that the most
recent downturn in WTI oil prices continues week after week into
October, there well could be a panic run to sell billions of dollars
of those High-Yield, high-risk junk bonds. As one investment analyst
notes, “when the retail crowd finally does head for the exits en
masse, fund managers will be forced to come face to face with
illiquid secondary corporate credit markets where a lack of market
depth…has the potential to spark a fire
sale.”
The problem is that
this time, unlike in 2008, the Federal Reserve has no room to act.
Interest rates are already near zero and the Fed has bought
trillions of dollars of bank bad debt to prevent a chain-reaction US
bank panic.
One option that is not
being discussed at all in Washington would be for Congress to repeal
the disastrous 1913 Federal Reserve Act that gave control of our
nation’s money to a gang of private bankers, and to create a public
National Bank, owned completely by the United States Government,
that could issue credit and sell Federal debt without the
intermediaries of corrupt Wall Street bankers as the Constitution
intended. At the same time they could completely nationalize the six
or seven “Too Big To Fail” banks behind the entire financial mess
that is destroying the foundations of the United States and by
extension of the role of the dollar as world reserve currency, of
most of the world.
F. William Engdahl is strategic risk consultant and
lecturer, he holds a degree in politics from Princeton University
and is a best-selling author on oil and geopolitics, exclusively for
the online magazine “New
Eastern Outlook”.