Gulf states could borrow record $100b from markets this year

Dubai: Gulf economies will borrow a record amount this year to help cover budget deficits expected to add up to about $490 billion over the next three years, according to S&P Global Ratings.

For the five oil-reliant members of the GCC, the dual shock of the coronavirus pandemic and lower crude prices means sovereign balance-sheets may “continue to deteriorate up until 2023”, analysts said in a report Monday. Debt will probably be used to finance about 60 per cent of the central government fiscal shortfalls in 2020-2023, with asset drawdowns used to cover the rest.

S&P predicts GCC nations – Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain and Oman – will borrow about $100 billion and use up another $80 billion in government assets to cover this year’s financing requirement. Annual debt issuance will reach $70 billion by 2023 under the assumption that Saudi Arabia narrows its fiscal shortfall over the period.

“Most GCC sovereigns have demonstrated ready access to the international capital markets this year, and are in the enviable position of having substantial pools of external liquid assets to fund their fiscal deficits should market access become constrained,” S&P said.

Go for bonds

All but debt-free before crude prices nosedived in 2014, many Gulf governments have increasingly come to count on borrowing while making halting efforts to cut spending and diversify their economies. Saudi Arabia has largely relied on debt to cover its deficit this year, and Bahrain and Qatar have also tapped the bond market.

S&P said Oman will likely follow in its neighbors’ footsteps and borrow in the second-half of the year as global economic conditions improve and oil prices recover. In the absence of debt issuance, the Omani government would likely liquidate some of its financial assets, which S&P estimates at about 55 per cent of gross domestic product in 2019.

The rating company forecasts an average Brent oil price of $30 per barrel for the rest of 2020, $50 in 2021, and $55 from 2022.