Oil's rapid acceleration toward $150 a barrel threatens to spur Gulf Arab inflation to new records as currency pegs to the ailing US dollar prevent the oil producers from mopping up excess liquidity.
As Gulf central bankers prepare for a key meeting in Doha on Monday, the oil price surge places more pressure on Gulf states preparing for monetary union to follow Kuwait's lead and revalue their currencies to fight inflation.
Oil jumped nearly 9 percent to a record $139 a barrel on Friday-and could top $150 in less than a month as strong demand in Asia triggers a slowdown in shipments of crude to the United States, investment bank Morgan Stanley said last week.
For Saudi Arabia and the five other states that form the world's biggest-oil exporting region, rocketing oil revenues could drive public spending, fuelling money supply and stoking inflation in economies that doubled in size from 2002 to 2006. But Gulf states-bar Kuwait-are constrained in their fight against inflation by dollar pegs which have forced them to track seven US interest rate cuts totalling 325 basis points since September.
"All of the shocks of high oil prices are being absorbed by the real economy rather than the exchange rate or interest rates," said Marios Maratheftis, regional head of research at Standard Chartered Bank. "Prices show no signs of slowing down." Inflation in the kingdom, the world's biggest oil-exporter, hit an at least 30-year peak of 10.5 percent annually in April, while in Qatar, the world's largest exporter of liquefied natural gas, prices soared at an annual rate of 14.75 percent in the first quarter.
Prices will rise by an average of 9 percent in most Gulf states this year as rents and global commodity prices surge, a Reuters poll showed last month. But high oil prices cannot alone be blamed for inflation, analysts said.
Other global oil producers, including Canada and Norway, have low inflation rates largely because their currencies have strengthened against the dollar, which is down almost 20 percent against the euro since the beginning of 2007.
"Increasing oil prices encourage governments to spend more money given the capacity constraints in the region," said Paul Gamble, head of research at Saudi-based investment firm Jadwa Investment. "That should push the exchange rate up and dampen the impact of inflation."
CURBING SPENDING:
While rental and food prices-the main drivers of inflation-should begin to taper off, money supply growth will continue to drive inflation for at least three to four years in the Gulf, Gamble said. "Inflation is spreading to other parts of the economy through liquidity created through high oil prices and negative real interest rates," he said.
Gulf policymakers have repeatedly said they would not follow the lead of Kuwait, which severed its link to the dollar more than a year ago partly to slow down imported inflation. The states preparing for monetary union had agreed to keep their dollar pegs until the region created a single currency as early as 2010.
Gulf states would not act alone in currency reform, UAE Central Bank Governor Sultan Nasser al-Suweidi said on Sunday.
Regional central bank governors will meet on Monday in Doha to discuss ways to get the beleaguered currency project on track, possibly paving the way for multilateral currency reform. In the meantime, the impact of oil at $150 a barrel on regional inflation may not be immediate if governments follow through with plans to curb spending, said John Sfakianakis, chief economist at SABB bank, HSBC's Saudi affiliate. Saudi Arabia said in May it was having some success with efforts to curb public spending-a strategy other Gulf states have also pointed to in slowing down inflation.
Acquisitions outside of the region by Gulf Arab buyers more than tripled to $89.1 billion in 2007, London-based research firm Dealogic said in April.
"They could very well keep that new money outside of the region," Sfakianakis said. "Indications are that governments are trying to balance the growth they need to have with a more measured approach to spending.
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