Iran will pre-sell crude oil to its own citizens to fight back against US sanctions
Iran has decided to pre-sell the country's oil, the
main source of the Islamic Republic's income, to its citizens by offering oil
bonds and the government has said it intends to put the oil on the stock market
in the framework of an "economic breakthrough".
The chief of staff of the president of Iran Mahmoud
Vaezi said in a rare comment that anyone who "can buy as many as 50,000 to
100,000 barrels of oil on the energy stock market could get a small ship and
export it."
Officials say it is an attempt to overcome the budget
deficit the government faces amid the suffocating sanctions imposed on the
country by the U.S. as well as the economic impact that country has faced over
the coronavirus pandemic.
Iranian President Hassan Rouhani promoted the plan
in a session with his cabinet members on Wednesday saying that it is "a
safe investment for the people" instead of investing in the gold and
foreign currency market.
The president described the plan of domestic sale of
oil as a sample of a "people-centered economy" and an effective
measure to organize the capital and stock exchange market which is an
"important step to counter the enemies' oil embargo," as Tasnim News
Agency reported on Tuesday.
The U.S. economic sanctions, widespread corruption
and domestic mismanagement have pushed Iranians over the years to invest in
gold and hard currency in order to protect their money against the devaluation
of their national currency and high inflation.
The withdrawal of the United States from the Iran
nuclear deal in May 2018 led to the devaluation of rial, Iran's national
currency.
The deal had aimed to ease economic sanctions on
Iran in return for Tehran's commitment to curb its nuclear programs but when
the U.S. pulled out of the deal and resumed economic sanctions, Iran's already
ailing economy was badly affected.
The complex economic conditions of the country has
made the selling of oil on the international market a Herculean task and
experts say they are suspicious about the long-term success of the oil
preselling plan.
"I have never heard of any other top oil
exporters taking such a move," said Iranian economist Mousa Ghaninejad to
ABC News.
Ghaninejad says that while selling bonds is a
standard tool that a government can use to help with a budget's deficit, he
does not see it as a viable option for Iran given the current circumstances.
"It sounds like there are people in the
administration who want to reinvent the wheel from scratch. It is not how the
global economy works" he added, saying the plan is "vague and
unclear."
The head of the energy stock market Ali Hosseini
clarified that the pre-sale of oil bonds, set to be offered on the market as of
Sunday, are different from President Rouhani's "economic
breakthrough" plan.
"These bonds are offered based on the National
Oil Company procedure of selling bonds ... They are two-year bonds with an
interest rate of around 19%," Hosseini said in an interview with the
Islamic Republic News Agency on Friday.
"The president's plan will be announced once it
is finalized regarding the legal requirements and executive regulations,"
he added.
However, Ghaninejad said that the two-year bonds
being sold are not the most sensible option for most people.
"With an inflation rate of around 50%, no wise
business person would buy a two-year bond with 19% interest rate. It means they
have to bear around 30% of negative interest," he said. "If the
government mandates the banks to buy the bonds and shares, then the banks have
to borrow money from the Central Bank to compensate for their loss in the coming
years, which means more inflation rate," Ghaninejad explained.
But, supporters of the oil pre-selling scheme,
including the head of the Central Bank Abdolnaser Hemmati, say the country is
running out of options to make up for the budget deficit amid sanctions.
Hemmati wrote in an Instagram post on Wednesday that
the government has four methods to remedy the deficit: "reducing expenses,
increasing tax revenues, selling government shares and assets, and issuing
bonds or pre-selling sanctioned goods such as crude oil."
Claiming that the first three solutions are not
possible due to the coronavirus pandemic, he believes issuing bonds and
pre-selling oil on the stock market is the preferred option as the bonds are
"less costly and more manageable for the government."
Across the political aisle, parliamentarians with
conservative party affiliations who are long-standing political rival of
President Rouhani have criticized the government's oil pre-sell plan in the
stock market over the possible long-term consequences on inflation.
The Energy Committee of the parliament submitted a
letter to the parliament speaker asking him to warn the government about its
hasty decisions, as Mehr News reported on Wednesday.
Rouhani's administration plans to start pre-selling
the oil on the stock market beginning today.



