Saudi Arabia hikes oil investments as it profits from price surge

Story By: Reuters.com

Saudi Arabia’s state oil company Aramco, under pressure from the West to boost output amid soaring prices, pledged on Sunday to hike investments by around 50% this year as it reported a doubling in 2021 profits.

Saudi Aramco (SE 🙂 benefitted from a more than 50% surge in oil prices last year, as increased COVID-19 vaccination rates and loosening restrictions resulted in demand outpacing supply.

Prices then leapt above $ 100 a barrel last month to hit 14 year highs after Russia invaded Ukraine, leading Western nations to urge Saudi Arabia and other producers to raise output.

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Aramco said it aimed to boost its capital expenditure (capex) to $ 40-50 billion this year, with further growth expected until around the middle of the decade. Capex was $ 31.9 billion last year, up 18% from 2020 – indicating an increase of about 50% for this year at the middle of the guidance range.

The company made $ 110 billion in net profit last year, up from $ 49 billion a year earlier. Analysts had expected a net profit of $ 106 billion, according to the mean estimate of analysts on Refinitiv’s Eikon.

Aramco shares surged over 4% in early trade to a high of 43.85 riyals, valuing the company at 8.76 trillion riyals ($ 2.34 trillion).

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A $ 2 trillion valuation was a goal sought by de-facto Saudi leader Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman before the company’s record $ 29.4 billion initial public offering in 2019.

He has announced plans to sell more Aramco shares.

The surge in Aramco’s valuation on Sunday moved it above that of Microsoft (NASDAQ :), though it remains behind Apple (NASDAQ :)’s $ 2.68 trillion.

The Saudi government said last month that Crown Prince Mohammed, who is leading a huge investment drive to diversify the kingdom’s economy, had transferred 4% of Aramco shares to the country’s sovereign wealth fund.

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BOOSTING CAPEX

Aramco has said it plans to raise its “maximum sustainable capacity” to 13 million barrels a day by 2027, and wants to boost gas production by more than 50% by 2030.

The company’s average hydrocarbon production was 12.3 million barrels of oil equivalent per day last year.

Aramco also plans to develop significant hydrogen export capability and become a global leader in carbon capture and storage technology, it said.

“Although economic conditions have improved considerably, the outlook remains uncertain due to various macro-economic and geopolitical factors,” CEO Amin Nasser said in a statement.

“But our investment plan aims to tap into rising long-term demand for reliable, affordable and ever more secure and sustainable energy.”

Aramco said its free cash flow was $ 107.5 billion last year, compared to $ 49.1 billion in 2020. It declared a dividend of $ 75 billion for 2021, in line with its earlier pledge.

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