Keep in mind that the entire rationale for the price cap is to keep Russian oil on the market. The stated position of the EU/G7 is that Russia can sell its oil, just for no more than $60/Bbl. So there's no issue with the purchase/resale of Urals crude in the "laundering" modality you mentioned. And while India notionally is not backing t…
Keep in mind that the entire rationale for the price cap is to keep Russian oil on the market. The stated position of the EU/G7 is that Russia can sell its oil, just for no more than $60/Bbl. So there's no issue with the purchase/resale of Urals crude in the "laundering" modality you mentioned. And while India notionally is not backing the price cap, they are only too happy to make money off of it (and they are).
There is a large global market for refined products, but the market for RUSSIAN refined products is more or less Europe. When India and China buy Russian crude, it flows into Indian and Chinese refineries--to make the very refined oil products that Russia sells to Europe. By buying Russian crude, they have less demand for Russian refined products.
Now, as you point out, this might play out with Russia producing less refined product volume and selling more crude volume, with India and perhaps even China buying the crude and then re-exporting refined products back to even Europe. As economically insane as that is, that's a very real scenario under the price cap regime. If that's the case overall Russian oil production might not fall all that much.
So long as the price caps hold, the EU and G7 nations are okay with that outcome; the goal is not to keep Russian crude from coming to market, but to keep Russia from profiting much if at all from that crude. At the current discount being applied to Urals crude, Russia is believed to be selling its oil more or less at cost. They generate enough revenue to keep the oil flowing but there's no money left over (presumably) to fund Putin's war in Ukraine. At the moment, the price cap appears to be achieving that objective.
But if India, China, and other countries do not choose to re-export refined products, an EU ban on Russian refined oil products plus a price cap for everywhere else could result in Russia having to curtail production and shut down various wells and possibly entire fields. If the projection of 1 million barrels per day reduction in Russian output is accurate, that's a significant percentage of Russia's overall output.
As I noted in an earlier article, this is one of the unstated risks of the price cap--if Russian oil is forced off the market and they have to shut down oil wells, they may have a problem bringing that idled capacity back online in the future. Wells don't do well just sitting idle, and a large portion of Russian wells are in permafrost--if the oil stops coming up the well any water that comes up with it is likely to freeze, which could damage the well itself, making the shutdown more or less permanent. Russia is already showing signs of inability to bring capacity idled during the pandemic lockdowns back online, and this was before the sanctions and the price cap began starving Russia of oil revenues.
How long this economically distorted way of bringing Russian oil to market can endure is, I think, primarily a function of the price for Brent crude. The higher it goes, the more pressure there will be for Urals crude to exceed the price cap. There was already one closing above the price cap amount so the cap CAN be breached. The awkward questions will all come in when/if Urals crude closes above $60 and stays there. If that happens the EU has to either take steps to force Urals crude off the market altogether, which would push Brent even higher, or abandon the cap.
Either way, there are some large ramifications for global oil markets which come to bear this year.
Keep in mind that the entire rationale for the price cap is to keep Russian oil on the market. The stated position of the EU/G7 is that Russia can sell its oil, just for no more than $60/Bbl. So there's no issue with the purchase/resale of Urals crude in the "laundering" modality you mentioned. And while India notionally is not backing the price cap, they are only too happy to make money off of it (and they are).
There is a large global market for refined products, but the market for RUSSIAN refined products is more or less Europe. When India and China buy Russian crude, it flows into Indian and Chinese refineries--to make the very refined oil products that Russia sells to Europe. By buying Russian crude, they have less demand for Russian refined products.
Now, as you point out, this might play out with Russia producing less refined product volume and selling more crude volume, with India and perhaps even China buying the crude and then re-exporting refined products back to even Europe. As economically insane as that is, that's a very real scenario under the price cap regime. If that's the case overall Russian oil production might not fall all that much.
So long as the price caps hold, the EU and G7 nations are okay with that outcome; the goal is not to keep Russian crude from coming to market, but to keep Russia from profiting much if at all from that crude. At the current discount being applied to Urals crude, Russia is believed to be selling its oil more or less at cost. They generate enough revenue to keep the oil flowing but there's no money left over (presumably) to fund Putin's war in Ukraine. At the moment, the price cap appears to be achieving that objective.
But if India, China, and other countries do not choose to re-export refined products, an EU ban on Russian refined oil products plus a price cap for everywhere else could result in Russia having to curtail production and shut down various wells and possibly entire fields. If the projection of 1 million barrels per day reduction in Russian output is accurate, that's a significant percentage of Russia's overall output.
As I noted in an earlier article, this is one of the unstated risks of the price cap--if Russian oil is forced off the market and they have to shut down oil wells, they may have a problem bringing that idled capacity back online in the future. Wells don't do well just sitting idle, and a large portion of Russian wells are in permafrost--if the oil stops coming up the well any water that comes up with it is likely to freeze, which could damage the well itself, making the shutdown more or less permanent. Russia is already showing signs of inability to bring capacity idled during the pandemic lockdowns back online, and this was before the sanctions and the price cap began starving Russia of oil revenues.
https://newsletter.allfactsmatter.us/p/could-the-oil-price-cap-end-russian
How long this economically distorted way of bringing Russian oil to market can endure is, I think, primarily a function of the price for Brent crude. The higher it goes, the more pressure there will be for Urals crude to exceed the price cap. There was already one closing above the price cap amount so the cap CAN be breached. The awkward questions will all come in when/if Urals crude closes above $60 and stays there. If that happens the EU has to either take steps to force Urals crude off the market altogether, which would push Brent even higher, or abandon the cap.
Either way, there are some large ramifications for global oil markets which come to bear this year.
I'm glad you enjoy my Substack.