Saudi Arabia faces the prospect of deeper oil production cuts after Iraq joined the queue of group members seeking immunity from the deal hatched in Algiers. More than a third of OPEC’s production - Nigeria, Libya, Iraq and Iran - now stands outside the plan. The worsening OPEC equation presents Saudi Arabia with a difficult choice after its Algiers U-turn: carry a greater burden within the group, ceding market share to other producers, or lose credibility by softening the terms of the deal. In a worst-case scenario, Saudi Arabia will have to cut production by more than 1 million barrels a day, sending the kingdom’s output to a two-year low. While oil has rallied more than 15 per cent since Algiers, the growing cost of following through is becoming clear. (Angelina Rascouet/Bloomberg)

Meta delays release of Phoenix mixed-reality glasses to 2027, say reports
IndiGo's third day of mass flight cancellations throws Indian airports into disarray
UAE President receives Amazon founder Jeff Bezos
Saudi Arabia forecasts deficit of $44 billion in 2026 budget
