Oil Bears? Who Needs Them When You Have Russia’s Sechin?

 | Jun 05, 2019 03:35AM ET

Forget oil bears on NYMEX and ICE. Meet a more potent one: Rosneft's (OTC:OJSCY) Igor Sechin.

The chief executive of Russia’s giant oil producer, which also happens to be the world’s largest publicly-traded petroleum company, could singularly do more damage to OPEC now than any crude short-seller in New York or London.

As the Saudis—who head the 14-member Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries—work quietly to convince the Russians to stay in their production cutting agreement for a third straight year, Sechin is demanding Moscow walk out or compensate his company.

h3 Putin’s Powerful Ally Denounces OPEC Deal/h3

That’s quite a dare against the government of one of the world’s most feared leaders: Vladimir Putin. But Sechin himself is a close ally of the Russian president, and is often described as his "de facto deputy”. He is in the inner circle of Putin's most conservative counselors and is leader of the Kremlin's Siloviki faction, a lobby gathering former security services agents. And Sechin has made it clear that he couldn’t care less about the fate of the other nine non-OPEC countries that Russia leads in its pact with the Saudis, the alliance collectively known as OPEC+10. His focus is all about protecting the interests of Mother Russia. To that extent, what he says resonates well with his government and country.

Said Sechin, according to Russia’s Interfax news service:

“Does it make sense (for Russia) to reduce (oil output) if the U.S immediately takes (our) market share? We have to defend our market share.”

U.S. crude exports, which had retreated in April after hitting a record high of 3.6 million barrels per day earlier in the year, had climbed again to around 3.3 million bpd two weeks ago, data showed. The Saudis have, meanwhile, been cutting production by record levels and pressuring an increasingly-reluctant Russia to do more export curbs.

Sechin wants all these to stop as he can see U.S. crude filling any vacuum left in the world by Rosneft and other Russian oil exporters. He could also not see any logic in Moscow agreeing to further cuts with the Saudis when Russian oil production was already at 3-year lows from a pipeline contamination crisis that resulted in just 10.87 million bpd being pumped June 1-3, from a May average of 11.11 million bpd.

This is not the first time Sechin has poured scorn on OPEC+10: he wrote to Putin in December to criticize the pact in a letter that was famously leaked.

Should he be rebuffed again, he wants Rosneft to be compensated for its losses in cutting production.