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The Russians Have Persuaded The Chinese To Bail Out Their Oil Industry
China Money Report ^ | 14 November 2014 | D. Collins

Posted on 11/21/2014 7:28:09 PM PST by Lorianne

Last month Russian Finance Minister Anton Siluanov announced that Rosneft, Russia’s largest oil company, had requested 2 trillion roubles (then $49 billion) from the state’s National Wealth Fund (NWF) to help it meet its funding requirements. The request was refused but it left questions over how the oil company planned to meet its $30 billion in debt repayments due over the next year after the oil price collapse of recent months.

We now have the answer — a large part of it will be paid by China.

As part of the deal struck between China and Russia at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Forum in Beijing, Rosneft has agreed to sell a 10% stake in a Siberian unit to state-owned China National Petroleum Corp. The news was seen as evidence of Moscow seeking to deepen ties with Beijing as Western sanctions over Ukraine have left it isolated from European and American markets.

It is the second such deal to have been struck this year after a $400 billion agreement was reached in May between state-owned gas companies Gazprom and CNPC (China National Petroleum Corporation).

Not only have the deals helped in part to sooth fears over Russia’s stagnating economy but they now also appear to have backstopped Russian companies that have been frozen out of international capital markets.

combination of the oil price falling from $115 a barrel in June to below $82 on Wednesday and the collapsing rouble had compounded pressure over recent months. Rosneft’s $30 billion bill went from being worth around 1 trillion roubles in June to around 1.4 trillion as at Wednesday’s exchange rate, while lower oil prices squeezed its revenues.

The Russian business daily Vedomosti quotes Moody’s investor services as saying: “Rosneft is set to repay $21 billion of debt, which expires between the fourth quarter of 2014 and the first quarter of 2015 [primarily] from its own reserves, which are worth more than $20 billion, and with the help of backup lines of credit from Russian banks of $6 billion.”

Draining the companies capital buffers in this way might seem foolhardy given that the company will still have around $9 billion worth of repayments outstanding and ongoing spending commitments. Here China’s role becomes clear. According to Moody’s, Rosneft “can get significant advances from Chinese state-owned CNPC on account of oil supplies” in 2015, and that should be sufficient to cover the remainder of its debt payments.

The deals have helped bind the corporate liabilities of the two countries together. In essence China is promising to provide the dollar credit line that Russian companies sorely need, and which the Russian state is increasingly withholding, in exchange for increased control over the commodity supplies that its growing economy will require.

However, unlike China’s state-backed firms, Russia’s quasi-state-owned national champion companies are not in as good health as they ought to be.

Rosneft’s third quarter profits were all but wiped out as falling oil prices and the cost of sanctions bit into its bottom line. In September the company pledged to cut up to 25% of the 4,000 staff based at its Moscow headquarters to reduce costs.

Igor Sechin, Rosneft president and close ally of Russian president Vladimir Putin, tried to dismiss fears over the firm on Wednesday saying the refusal of its request for state support was “neither critical nor dramatic” but was careful to leave the door open in case the state alters its position.

However, former finance minister Alexei Kudrin issued a warning to the company over applying for state funds.

“My advice to Rosneft is not to take from the Wellbeing Fund,” he said. “Even if the Wellbeing Fund became simply a source of anti-crisis financing instead of the principal insurance for the pension fund, that means that it will be judged that Rosneft is in crisis. That’s not in Rosneft’s interests.”

The Russian state has already burned through a large amount of its foreign currency reserves defending the rouble, so it may be unwilling to step in to cover corporate debt repayments, which are set to reach $140 billion in 2015.

With their access to Western capital markets blocked by sanctions it appears that Russian corporates will increasingly have to look towards trading partners in the east for support. The question now is whether Beijing will continue to view the deals it has struck as being to its own advantage — especially if commodity prices are set to remain at or below current levels.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Russia
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 11/21/2014 7:28:09 PM PST by Lorianne
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To: Lorianne

By the time that deal plays out and Russia and China have done as much cheating and scheming as they can, the world will be fortunate if they do not go to war with each other.


2 posted on 11/21/2014 8:53:40 PM PST by Rockingham
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To: Lorianne; Clemenza

Too bad that the US isn’t allowing shale gas to be produced on federal lands. We could really squeeze Putin by undercutting natural gas prices in Europe. We could ship LNG on tankers across the Atlantic and make lots of money, because European gas prices are higher than in the US.


3 posted on 11/21/2014 9:39:38 PM PST by Paleo Conservative (Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean they're not really out to get you.)
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To: Lorianne

R I G H T............

Pooty better have either a barrel of KY handy or get him some Kevlar skivvies. The Chinese have been pulling fast biz deals for 5000 years.


4 posted on 11/21/2014 9:48:49 PM PST by X-spurt (CRUZ missile - armed and ready.)
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