Not only are the very limited pool of potential buyers extracting substantial discounts but there are higher shipping and insurance costs in shipping the oil to those markets.
That says the West’s strategy of trying to maintain flows of Russian oil with price caps above Russia’s costs of production, while reducing the amount of revenue those sales generate, is working as planned.
Vladimir Putin threatened last year that he would cut off Russian supply and send international oil prices soaring. Russia’s export volumes, however, actually grew two per cent last year.
International oil prices, which spiked above $US120 a barrel in the aftermath of the invasion, have actually fallen back significantly since the invasion and have been trading around $US80 a barrel in recent months.
Russia’s budget for this year of a two per cent deficit was predicated on an average Urals price of $US70 a barrel, which now appears far-fetched. Typically, oil and gas generates more than 40 per cent of the government’s income so the loss of its gas revenues and the prices it is actually receiving for its oil is destined to render that forecast meaningless.
Also, the price caps on Russian diesel ($US100 a barrel) and lower-valued-added refined products ($US45 a barrel) only came into effect this week so are yet to impact Russia’s revenues, although they are less central to its budget than oil and gas revenue.
The other aspect of the budget update that will concern Russian officials and further undermine their budget forecasts for this year is that consumption and tax revenue also fell, by nearly 30 per cent. That says the invasion and the sanctions it triggered from the West are hurting domestic economic activity.
The discounts to international prices are also lower (the international price for diesel is between about $US110 and $US120 a barrel at present), probably because it is more difficult for the Europeans to source diesel elsewhere.
Against that, Russia will find it more difficult to sell diesel and other refined products to China and India because they have their own large refinery complexes.
If the experience of the cap on oil is a guide, the caps on refined products will provide buyers with leverage to demand big discounts.
The other aspect of the budget update that will concern Russian officials and further undermine their budget forecasts for this year is that consumption and tax revenue also fell, by nearly 30 per cent. That says the invasion and the sanctions it triggered from the West are hurting domestic economic activity.
To add to the pressure on Russia’s finances, the US is reported to be preparing to impose a 200 per cent tariff on Russia’s aluminium exports. Russia’s is the world’s second-largest aluminium producer, behind only China.
US imports of Russian aluminium have been falling steadily in the past year – less than five per cent of the primary aluminium imported into the US comes from Russia – but the threat of a wider ban would be unsettling given its rapidly deteriorating fiscal position.
Also unsettling would be a review of the price cap on oil (and planned regular review of the new caps on refined products), which could see the cap lowered, giving even more leverage to potential buyers.
To blunt the impact of the slump in its revenue base Russia is raiding its sovereign wealth fund, which had assets of about $US148 billion ($215 billion).
Loading
The finance ministry said it would sell about 160 billion roubles over the next month. It sold 38.5 billion roubles worth of Chinese yuan and gold from the fund last month. It also plans to issue about 800 billion roubles of domestic bonds in the March quarter, increasing its planned full-year domestic debt issuance by that amount.
Even though it has been denied access to international debt markets by the West’s sanctions, and lost access to central bank reserves held in the West, Russia can draw on its sovereign wealth fund and the domestic market to maintain the funding for the war in Ukraine for quite some time.
That is, however, now coming at a significant and increasing cost and the likely long-term outcome – the loss of the largest and closest pre-war market for its energy exports, the depletion of its reserves and the damage done to its economy by Western sanctions and the withdrawal of Western companies – will weigh heavily on its future.
The Business Briefing newsletter delivers major stories, exclusive coverage and expert opinion. Sign up to get it every weekday morning.
Stay connected with us on social media platform for instant update click here to join our Twitter, & Facebook
We are now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel (@TechiUpdate) and stay updated with the latest Technology headlines.
For all the latest Business News Click Here
For the latest news and updates, follow us on Google News.