Real Motive Behind Saudi Purge Emerges: $800 Billion In Confiscated Assets
8
November, 2017
From
the very beginning, there was something off about Sunday's
unprecedented countercouppurge unleashed by
Mohammad bin Salman on alleged political enemies, including some of
Saudi Arabia's richest and most powerful royals and government
officials: it was just too brazen to be a simple "power
consolidation" move; in fact most commentators were shocked by
the sheer audacity, with one question outstanding: why take such a
huge gamble?
After all, there was little chatter of an imminent coup
threat against either the senile Saudi King or the crown prince, MbS,
and a crackdown of such proportions would only boost animosity
against the current ruling royals further.
Things
gradually started to make sense when it emerged that
some $33 billion in oligarch net worth was
"at risk" among just the 4 wealthiest arrested Saudis,
which included the media-friendly prince Alwaleed.
One
day later, a Reuters
source reported that
in a just as dramatic expansion of the original crackdown, bank
accounts of over 1,200 individuals had been frozen, a number which
was growing by the minute. Commenting on this land cashgrab,
we rhetorically asked "So when could the confiscatory process
end? As
we jokingly
suggested yesterday,
the ruling Saudi royal family has realized that not only can it crush
any potential dissent by arresting dozens of potential coup-plotters,
it can also replenish the country's foreign reserves, which in the
past 3 years have declined by over $250 billion,
by confiscating some or all of their generous wealth, which is in the
tens if not hundreds of billions. If MbS continues going down the
list, he just may recoup a substantial enough amount to what it makes
a difference on the sovereign account."
Then
an article overnight
from the WSJ confirmed that
fundamentally, the purge may be nothing more than a forced extortion
scheme, as the Saudi government - already suffering from soaring
budget deficits, sliding oil revenues and plunging reserves - was
"aiming
to confiscate cash and other assets worth as much as $800 billion in
its broadening crackdown on alleged corruption among the kingdom’s
elite."
As
we reported
yesterday,
the WSJ writes that the country’s central bank, the Saudi Arabian
Monetary Authority, said late Tuesday that it has frozen the bank
accounts of “persons of interest” and said the move is “in
response to the Attorney General’s request pending the legal cases
against them.” But what is more notable, is that while we
first suggested -
jokingly - on Monday that the ulterior Saudi motive would be to
simply "nationalize" the net worth of some of Saudi
Arabia's wealthiest individuals, now the WSJ confirms that this is
precisely the case, and what's more notably is that the amount in
question is absolutely staggering: nearly 2x Saudi Arabia's total
foreign reserves!
As
the WSJ alleges, "the
crackdown could also help replenish state coffers. The government has
said that assets accumulated through corruption will become state
property, and people familiar with the matter say the government
estimates the value of assets it can reclaim at up to 3 trillion
Saudi riyal, or $800 billion."
While
much of that money remains abroad - and invested in various assets
from bonds to stocks to precious metals and real estate - which will
complicate efforts to reclaim it, even a portion of that amount would
help shore up Saudi Arabia’s finances.
A prolonged period of low oil prices forced the government to borrow money on the international bond market and to draw extensively from the country’s foreign reserves, which dropped from $730 billion at their peak in 2014 to $487.6 billion in August, the latest available government data.
Confirming
our speculation was advisory firm Eurasia Group, which in a note said
that the crown prince "needs cash to fund the government’s
investment plans" adding that “It was becoming increasingly
clear that additional revenue is needed to improve the economy’s
performance. The government will also strike deals with businessmen
and royals to avoid arrest, but only as part of a greater commitment
to the local economy.”
Of
course, there is a major danger that such a draconian cash grab would
result in a violent blowback by everyone who has funds parked in the
Kingdom. To assuage fears, Saudi Arabia’s minister of commerce,
Majid al Qasabi, on Tuesday sought to reassure the private sector
that the corruption investigation wouldn’t interfere with normal
business operations. The procedures and investigations undertaken by
the anticorruption agency won’t affect ongoing business or
projects, he said. Furthermore, the Saudi central bank said that
individual accounts had been frozen, not corporate accounts. “It is
business as usual for both banks and corporates,” the central bank
said.
However,
this is problematic: first, not only is the list of names of detained
and "frozen" accounts growing by the day...
The government earlier this week vowed that it would arrest more people as part of the corruption investigation, which began around three years ago. As a precautionary measure, authorities have banned a large number of people from traveling outside the country, among them hundreds of royals and people connected to those arrested, according to people familiar with the matter. The government hasn’t officially named the people who were detained.
...
but the mere shock of a move that would be more appropriate for the
1950s USSR has prompted crushed any faith and confidence the
international community may have had in Saudi governance and business
practices.
The
biggest irony would be if from this flagrant attmept to shore up the
Kingdom's deteriorating finances, a domestic and international bank
run emerged, with locals and foreign individuals and companies
quietly, or not so quietly, pulling their assets and capital from
confiscation ground zero, in the process precipitating the very
economic collapse that the move was meant to avoid.
Judging
by the market reaction, which has sent Riyal forward tumbling on
rising bets of either a recession, or devaluation, or both, this
unorthodox attempt to inject up to $800 billion in assets into the
struggling local economy, could soon backfire spectacularly.
Meanwhile,
for those still confused about the current political scene in Saudi
Arabia, here is an infographic courtesy of the WSJ which explains
"Who
Has Been Promoted, Who Has Been Detained in Saudi Arabia"
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