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Putin May Collect $321 Billion Windfall If Oil and Gas Keep Flowing

Published 04/01/2022, 04:55 AM
Updated 04/01/2022, 05:27 AM
© Reuters.  Putin May Collect $321 Billion Windfall If Oil and Gas Keep Flowing

(Bloomberg) -- Russia’s economy has staggered through the first full month of the war with Ukraine but it may yet emerge with a sparkling balance sheet if some of its biggest trade partners don’t turn off the tap on its exports of energy.

For all the hardships visited on consumers at home and the financial chokehold put on the government from abroad, Bloomberg Economics expects Russia will earn nearly $321 billion from energy exports this year, an increase of more than a third from 2021. It’s also on track for a record current-account surplus that the Institute of International Finance says may reach as high as $240 billion.

“The single biggest driver of Russia’s current account surplus continues to look solid,” IIF economists led by Robin Brooks said in a report. “With current sanctions in place, substantial inflows of hard currency into Russia look set to continue.”

The calculus may change completely, however, in case of an embargo on energy sales. And even without it, Russia’s oil exports and output are already falling, with the International Energy Agency predicting it may lose nearly a quarter of its crude production this month.

Many of the country’s traditional customers are also looking elsewhere and choosing not to sign new contracts for Russian supplies amid widespread condemnation of President Vladimir Putin’s aggression. Others like India are getting steep discounts. 

The invasion of Ukraine has shocked Germany and its European Union allies into a radical shift in energy policy, and the bloc is rushing to cut its dependence on Russia. For now, Europe’s largest economy opposes sanctions or political pressure that would prompt a full energy embargo. Only a handful of nations -- including the U.S. and the U.K. -- have imposed explicit bans on imports from Russia.

Oil and gas account for about half of Russia’s exports and contributed around 40% to last year’s budget revenue.

What Our Economists Say:

“Hydrocarbon revenue is a lifeline for Russia’s economy, helping to damp the impact of otherwise severe sanctions and stave off a balance-of-payments crisis. But even without an energy embargo, inflation is soaring and a deep recession looms.”

--Scott Johnson.

Still, the combination of a steep ruble depreciation and a higher dollar price for oil will generate an extra 8.5 trillion rubles ($103 billion) in budget revenue this year, according to TS Lombard.

“The Finance Ministry will use some of it to cushion the blow but cautiously, not to spark inflation further,” said Madina Khrustaleva, an analyst at TS Lombard in London. “It seems that all these sanctions will destroy the non-energy part of the economy. Russia will depend on energy even more.”

Although the showdown over Ukraine has rattled energy shipments, the shock to imports and domestic demand will be so severe that the current account, the broadest measure of trade and services, may hit a new historical high after last year’s record $120 billion.

Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS) GS)., whose upward revision for the current-account surplus this year puts it at $205 billion, says it may be enough for the Bank of Russia to meet the private sector’s demand for foreign exchange and allow it eventually to loosen capital controls. 

With Russian consumers already caught in a barrage of shocks from inflation to a hollowing out of incomes, Goldman economists predict a 20% collapse in imports this year, double the expected decline in exports. 

A healthy balance sheet won’t save Russia from a deep recession, but it’s helping sustain government spending at a time when the government has no access to international capital markets. TS Lombard analysts said the ruble’s exchange rate is effectively backed by current inflows now that sanctions froze much of the central bank’s currency reserves.

Russia’s ability to sell oil and gas abroad may be the only thing keeping the economy from descending into an even worse financial meltdown. 

The IIF, an association of the world’s biggest financial institutions, said an energy embargo by the EU, the U.K. and the U.S. would lead to a contraction of more than 20% in output and may cost Russia as much as $300 billion in export receipts, depending on price swings.

 

Latest comments

People regreted for not voting for Trump there is no subjunctive mood in history
good
good Lucy
not if he wants roubles! good luck with that! turn the gas off I'll be happy to wear a coat, it ain't rocket science! many ways to keep warm without their gas
Everything Biden & Trudeau are doing is making the situation worse.
Bidens prepresidential Russian involvement seems to have been the planning stage of the big ripoff.
FYI guys, don't pay attention to anything you hear about negotiations to end the war. the west is PAYING Putting hundreds of billions of dollars to KEEP this war going. mark my words, next week the Ruble will be HIGHER than it was before the invasion. and we ALL know Oil is. so WHY would Putin ****his own golden goose. And you can BET that big oil in the USA is BEGGING Putin to keep this charade going. They are ALL in on it. the the USD ? its going to *****when everyone realizes how much MONEY this is costing us that we DIDNT have to spend.... Putin must be laughing his ***off right now.
Md sameruil
Md sameruil
This whole invasion was a Putin scam from top to bottom and he's laughing at those stupid westerners all the way to the bank. And big oil and even big money all over this world was in on the scam. And why not? it shot the price of oil and gasoline up all over the world and big oil is getting RICH, the BEST part is that nobody is complaining about their windfall profits this! what surprises me (and im seldom surprised at western ignorance) is that the media, INCLUDING this article are still spreading the LIE that sanctions have hurt the ruble. Thats a blatant LIE. that scam with the Ruble running down was part of Putting PLAN, he got to buy the Ruble at 130/1 USD and as of yesterday it was trading at the same 80/1 it was Before the invasion. Yet even this article pretends that inflation is raging in Russia because of the now NON EXISTANT hit to the Ruble. Think BLOOMBERG didnt know that when they printed this propaganda? Think Bloomberg didnt know that when they printed this propaganda?
the title of this news is interesting! Putins collects…it means Russia
russia is a dictatorship that means anything that belongs to Russia belongs to Putin. Especially the MONEY.
wonder what happens if india buy more oil cheap from russia and re sell to the europeans? all parties benefit
If by "ALL" parties benefit, you mean the handful of already obscenely rich, then you must think just like they do. Because they too don't consider the OTHER 7 billion people on this planet to be worth the slightestt  consideration. To them they don't even EXIST.
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