FacebookInstagramTwitterContact

 

Hari Raya Aidilfitri Celebration           >>           Spacex Launches Starlink Satellites On Company's 40th Mission Of 2024 (Video)           >>           Blizzard takes aim at Overwatch 2 console cheaters           >>           Cities: Skylines 2's embarrassed developers are giving away beachfront property for free           >>           Apple says it was ordered to remove WhatsApp and Threads from China App Store           >>           Oil Price Eases As Iran Downplays Attack           >>           After Their PM Halts Ukraine Aid, Slovaks Dig Deep To Help           >>           US Congress Close To Passing Long-Awaited Ukraine Aid           >>           Francis Ogolla: Kenya Investigates Crash That Killed Military Chief           >>           In Pictures: India Votes In World's Biggest Election           >>          

 

SHARE THIS ARTICLE




REACH US


GENERAL INQUIRY

[email protected]

 

ADVERTISING

[email protected]

 

PRESS RELEASE

[email protected]

 

HOTLINE

+673 222-0178 [Office Hour]

+673 223-6740 [Fax]

 



Upcoming Events





Prayer Times


The prayer times for Brunei-Muara and Temburong districts. For Tutong add 1 minute and for Belait add 3 minutes.


Imsak

: 05:01 AM

Subuh

: 05:11 AM

Syuruk

: 06:29 AM

Doha

: 06:51 AM

Zohor

: 12:32 PM

Asar

: 03:44 PM

Maghrib

: 06:32 PM

Isyak

: 07:42 PM

 



The Business Directory


 

 



World Business


  Home > World Business


Baker Hughes Is Drilling in Middle East Even as OPEC Cuts


Photographer: HAIDAR MOHAMMED ALI/AFP via Getty Images

 


 January 27th, 2017  |  08:58 AM  |   1225 views

BLOOMBERG.COM

 

OPEC production cuts haven’t slowed the search for more oil in the Middle East.

 

Baker Hughes Inc., which will soon be the world’s second-largest oil services provider, called the Middle East a positive environment for expected work in the first half this year. The region was one of the main reasons the company stopped a sales slide of seven straight quarters at the end of last year.

 

 

"There’s a bit of a disconnect between the OPEC cuts that were announced and what we’re forecasting at least for the next six months in terms of activity," Martin Craighead, chief executive officer at Baker Hughes, told analysts and investors Thursday on a conference call. "We see no pullback that would correlate to the announcement on a production cut. We still expect it to be relatively steady. A couple pockets of the more midsize to smaller players in the Middle East are actually going to increase."

 

The healthy outlook for drilling in the region underscores the temporary nature of the output cuts, and the potential for production to recover swiftly after global prices rebounded to above $55 a barrel. The deal between the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries and several non-members to reduce supply will last for six months before being reviewed.

 

The biggest source of the planned cuts is Saudi Arabia, which has said more than 80 percent of targeted reduction has been implemented. Some customers in the Middle East haven’t wavered from their output goals for 2020 and 2025, he said.

 

Middle East

 

The region that includes the Middle East is Baker Hughes’ second-largest market in terms of revenue, trailing North America. The company that helps explorers drill and maintain oil wells boosted quarterly sales for the first time since the end of 2014, thanks in part to year-end growth in the Middle East, it said Thursday in an earnings statement.

 

The number of active rigs in the Middle East fell in December to the lowest since August 2013, Baker Hughes data show. Baker Hughes is expected to close by mid-year its merger with the oilfield unit of General Electric Co. to become the No. 2 service and equipment supplier.

 

OPEC and other producers are likely to fully comply with the curbs, bringing global crude markets into balance early this year, according to Kuwait’s oil minister.

 

The market is “becoming a bit more comfortable that OPEC may very well deliver the cuts it promised,” Bart Melek, the head of global commodity strategy at TD Securities in Toronto, said by telephone. “OPEC has continued to inform us that they are accelerating the cuts, so this market from the supply side looks well-disciplined.”

 


 

Source:
courtesy of BLOOMBERG

by David Wethe

 

If you have any stories or news that you would like to share with the global online community, please feel free to share it with us by contacting us directly at [email protected]

 

Related News


Lahad Datu Murder: Remand Of 13 Students Extende

 2024-03-30 07:57:54

In Pictures: India Votes In World's Biggest Election

 2024-04-20 00:10:59

Post Office Lawyer 'Missed' Key Horizon Finding

 2024-04-20 01:27:17