The Russian Oil Deal: Hope for Saudi Arabia, Cheap Barrels for India and China

 | Jan 31, 2023 04:30AM ET

  • Russia tells Saudis what they want to hear while selling oil at rock-bottom prices
  • Moscow’s situation underscores the difficulty of fighting G7’s $60 per barrel price cap
  • New caps coming on Russian fuels next, adding to Kremlin’s woes
  • The third anniversary of the infamous fight between Russia and Saudi Arabia over oil export quotas is approaching.

    One could be forgiven for wondering how such a conflict could have even happened with the affection and diplomacy in full display these days between Vladimir Putin and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. Just on Monday, the veteran Russian leader called the younger Saudi royal to assure him of Moscow’s support in maintaining oil price stability, the Kremlin said in a statement.

    But the Kremlin indicated on the same day that Putin had authorized Russian oil companies to sell as many barrels at whatever price deemed appropriate to get the country’s heavily-sanctioned crude moving on the global market.

    The increased exports of Russian crude at rock-bottom prices — ostensibly to India and China, the only destinations that can receive such sanctioned material — will hurt sales by Riyadh’s state oil company Saudi Aramco (TADAWUL:2222) to the same countries that make up the kingdom’s largest markets in Asia.

    Beyond that, they also mess up the Saudis’ aim of keeping a tight lid on supply from OPEC+ — an accomplishment the kingdom’s officials love to talk about, often citing the oil-producing alliance’s compliance of 100% or more with output quotas.

    OPEC+, which meets on Wednesday, is expected to leave unchanged production targets agreed upon in December by the 23 nations in its fold. The Russians, who co-chair OPEC+ with the Saudis, are also expected to remind the rest of the group about their commitment to upholding market stability (talk about irony).

    The Russian maneuver of giving hope to Saudi Arabia and cheap barrels to India and China underscores the difficulty faced by Putin in fighting the G7’s price cap of $60 per barrel imposed on his country’s oil while trying to live up to Moscow’s own commitments under OPEC+.

    The Kremlin, in its statements about Russian oil shipments, made clear that the government “forbids oil exports that adhere to Western price caps.”

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    But Moscow also indicated that it was allowing Russian private enterprise greater control over exports by saying it “has charged oil companies with overseeing contract wording.”

    As though that wasn’t enough, it added a line that was most damning for bulls in the oil market — that “the Russian government has not set a floor price for oil exports.”

    It was enough to pull crude prices down 2% by the day’s close after bullish intraday action that took the market up 2% at one point.