Kuwait’s KUFPEC Borrows $1.1 Bn to Expand Shale Gas Business

Kuwait’s KUFPEC Borrows $1.1 Bn to Expand Shale Gas Business
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Kuwait’s KUFPEC Borrows $1.1 Bn to Expand Shale Gas Business

Kuwait’s KUFPEC Borrows $1.1 Bn to Expand Shale Gas Business

The Kuwait Foreign Petroleum Exploration Company (KUFPEC) has signed a $1.1 billion finance deal with a number of banks to expand its oil and gas operations, the company’s chief executive said on Tuesday.

Japan’s Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation (SMBC), First Abu Dhabi Bank, Societe Generale, Japan’s Mizuho and Scotiabank are the banks involved in the transaction, according to a company statement.

The new financing includes a two-year grace period and is in addition to $3.5bn that KUFPEC has borrowed from banks since 2013.

The company will finish repaying the $3.5 billion next year, Sheikh Nawaf Al Sabah told a news conference in Kuwait.

It is currently producing 8,000 barrels of oil equivalent a day in Canada and plans to gradually increase output there by drilling a total of 2,000 wells, Al Sabah said.

KUFPEC, a subsidiary of state-owned Kuwait Petroleum Corporation (KPC), aims to boost its output to 150,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day (boed) by 2020 from 119,000 boed now, a level it will maintain until 2040, KUFPEC’s CEO noted.

He also said the company was currently studying new future oil and gas acquisitions abroad, without providing more details.

Al Sabah further noted that the company’s total assets are currently about $ 7 billion.

Regarding the company’s total reserves, he said they currently comprise 494 million barrels of oil equivalent, and the Canadian project will add 28 million to that.

Achieving KUFPEC’s foreign production target has been a multinational effort. The company is producing 38,000 barrels of oil equivalent a day in Australia, and it has drilled 120 wells to produce gas and condensates at shale fields in Canada’s Alberta province.

The project’s development plan aims to provide the Australian market with gas while also having the right to transfer part of the production to Kuwait should the need arise, Al Sabah stressed.



Gold Rebounds to End 6-Session Losing Streak as Dollar Rally Pauses

A view shows ingots of 99.99 percent pure gold in a workroom during production at Krastsvetmet precious metals plant in the Siberian city of Krasnoyarsk, Russia, May 23, 2024. REUTERS/Alexander Manzyuk
A view shows ingots of 99.99 percent pure gold in a workroom during production at Krastsvetmet precious metals plant in the Siberian city of Krasnoyarsk, Russia, May 23, 2024. REUTERS/Alexander Manzyuk
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Gold Rebounds to End 6-Session Losing Streak as Dollar Rally Pauses

A view shows ingots of 99.99 percent pure gold in a workroom during production at Krastsvetmet precious metals plant in the Siberian city of Krasnoyarsk, Russia, May 23, 2024. REUTERS/Alexander Manzyuk
A view shows ingots of 99.99 percent pure gold in a workroom during production at Krastsvetmet precious metals plant in the Siberian city of Krasnoyarsk, Russia, May 23, 2024. REUTERS/Alexander Manzyuk

Gold prices rebounded on Monday, having posted losses in the previous six sessions, with gains driven by a pause in the dollar's rally, while investors await comments from the Federal Reserve officials for clarity on the interest rate trajectory.
Spot gold rose 1% to $2,587.83 per ounce by 0917 GMT, moving away from a two-month low hit on Thursday. US gold futures were up 0.9% at $2,592.20.
Gold prices last week saw their biggest weekly decline in over three years as expectations of less-aggressive interest rate cuts by the Fed boosted the dollar.
However, the dollar was holding flat below Thursday's one-year high after rising 1.6% last week. A softer dollar makes bullion less expensive for buyers holding other currencies, Reuters said.
"We can look to the dollar for a significant part of the current gold price corrections ... I'm not saying you've found a solid physical floor yet, but clearly, some opportunistic buying is coming in to support the market as well," independent analyst Ross Norman said.
"As the year ends, we will see volatility in gold prices and there'll be some books clearing and profit-taking, regardless of what the Fed does in December."
Recent US economic data has reduced expectations for a December rate cut by the Fed. At least seven US central bank officials are due to speak this week.
Higher interest rates make holding gold, which doesn't pay any interest, less attractive.
"President Trump's inauguration is likely to see an ongoing strengthening of the USD (US dollar), which is negative for gold in the short to medium term. However, as his stated policies are likely to be significantly inflationary in the long term, this will benefit gold," said Michael Langford, chief investment officer at Scorpion Minerals.
Spot silver rose 1.4% to $30.63 per ounce, platinum added 1.4% at $951.59 and palladium climbed 1.8% to $967.62.