August 17, 2015
“Iraq is targeting eight million barrels a day but we don’t think they will get there, because even if they were to add four million barrels a day and produce that, we would need to see between $200 billion and $500 billion of investment into Iraq, but with oil at $50 a barrel, the industry just can’t afford the amount of reinvestment that needs to go into Iraq,” Waghorn said.
He said he expects better oil prices in the second half of the year and perhaps a rise in prices next year to around $65 to $70 per barrel. This would bode well for Iraq, he said, since Iraq and Saudi Arabia are currently the greatest producers in OPEC. Among all Fitch-rated sovereigns, Iraq has the greatest commodity dependence, the agency said. Oil accounts for around 40% of Iraq’s GDP and over 90% of fiscal and current external receipts.
The mitigating factors to rising oil prices, though, are fear over new supply coming from Iran after its recent negotiations with the U.S., Waghorn said, and output from the U.S. is also strong.
“There are a number of factors that are pulling and leading us to this oversupplied market today, but still, the market is not as oversupplied as it was,” Waghorn said. “Demand for oil is also robust, which is good, but right now, there isn’t enough to make prices, so we are not yet at the turning point. As such, oil prices are likely to remain volatile for some time as we try to find a bottom, but we do think that an estimate of between $65 and $70 per barrel for next year is good.”
In the longer term and barring an oil price recovery, Graham believes that Iraq has great potential as a regional industrial hub and consumer economy. The country was beginning to see a revival in construction – including, among others, a new shopping mall in Baghdad—before the fiscal situation deteriorated. If that dynamic continues, and Iraq makes better progress in terms of governance, then investors could become more interested in Iraq even without a recovery in oil prices, she said.
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