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Oil producers to discuss exit plans from cuts once market nears balance: Russia

Rosneft reaches $1.7b settlement with Sistema


December 24, 2017 00:00:00


MOSCOW, Dec 23 (Reuters): Oil producers will discuss exit strategy for their deal on cutting output once the market moves closer towards being balanced, Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak said in remarks published on Saturday.

"We will talk about it as we get closer to the market rebalancing," Novak was quoted as saying by Russia's Interfax news agency. RIA news agency carried similar comments.

Novak had said in an interview with Reuters this week that detailed talks on an exit strategy would only start when the markets approached balance.

Meanwhile, Russia's largest oil producer Rosneft said on Friday it has reached an amicable agreement with the Sistema conglomerate, which will pay out 100 billion roubles ($1.7 billion) to resolve a dispute over the Bashneft oil company.

Shares in Sistema, which groups the assets of Russian businessman Vladimir Yevtushenkov and includes the country's largest mobile operator MTS, were up 17.73 per cent in Moscow and 18.2 per cent in London after Rosneft said the sides have agreed to drop all legal proceedings.

Sistema declined comment on the agreement which requires approval from the Russian regional court.

Rosneft said Sistema must pay the damages no later than March 30, 2018.

The dispute centres on mid-sized oil company Bashneft and has pitted powerful Rosneft chief executive Igor Sechin, a close ally of President Vladimir Putin, against Yevtushenkov, a billionaire who some media reports suggest is close to Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev.

The way the battle was fought - via lawsuits and counter lawsuits - and the high value of the assets involved, rekindled concerns about Russia's investment climate and raised questions about the Kremlin's oversight of business.

Russia's largest lender Sberbank, along with the state-run Russian Direct Investment Fund (RDIF), will assist with raising funds for Sistema to compensate Rosneft for losses, Rosneft said.

Sberbank declined to comment.

The compromise achieved with RDIF's assistance "meets both sides' interests, sends a positive signal to the market and improves the investment climate in Russia", RDIF said in statement.

The Russian government seized Sistema's stake in Bashneft in 2014, saying its privatisation had been illegal. Rosneft later bought a controlling stake in Bashneft and in May filed its first lawsuit, alleging Sistema had removed assets from the company - something Sistema denies.

In a second claim, Rosneft was also seeking the return of dividends paid out by Bashneft between 2009 and 2014, when Sistema was its controlling shareholder.

The legal claims made against Sistema by Russia's top oil producer totalled $4.5 billion, prompting Sistema to retaliate against Rosneft by filing a $5.6 billion lawsuit.

A possible amicable agreement in a row between Rosneft and Sistema was a topic of Putin's informal meeting with businessmen on Thursday.

"Putin has repeatedly said that he would support an amicable settlement between Rosneft and AFK Sistema," Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov told a conference call with reporters on Friday.

Reports from London and New York say: Oil prices rose in light volumes on Friday, steadying near their highest levels since 2015 on pledges from OPEC leader Saudi Arabia and non-OPEC Russia that any exit from crude output cuts would be gradual.

Brent crude futures, the international benchmark for oil prices, ended the session up 35 cents at $65.25 a barrel, its highest close since June 2015.

US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures settled 11 cents higher at $58.47 a barrel. WTI has also been touching values not seen since mid-2015 over the past two months.


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