Business World

China invests $9.1B in Rosneft as Glencore, Qatar cut stakes

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MOSCOW/BEIJING — Chinese conglomera­te CEFC will buy a 14.16% stake in Russian oil major Rosneft for $9.1 billion from a consortium of Glencore and the Qatar Investment Authority (QIA), strengthen­ing the energy partnershi­p between Moscow and Beijing.

CEFC China Energy has grown in recent years from a niche oil trader into a sprawling energy conglomera­te and the transactio­n will allow China, the world’s second-largest energy consumer, to boost cooperatio­n with the world’s top oil producer.

The deal comes as the US imposes a new round of economic sanctions on Russia, making it difficult for large Western firms such as Glencore to develop partnershi­ps and increase ties with stateowned firms such as Rosneft.

Glencore said in a statement that CEFC will buy shares at a premium of around 16% to the 30-day volume weighted average price of Rosneft shares without naming the price. A CEFC spokesman said the company would pay $9.1 billion.

Rosneft’s market capitaliza­tion stands at $57 billion and the deal makes it one of the largest investment­s ever made by China into Russia.

Glencore and QIA will retain stakes of 0.5% and 4.7% in Rosneft respective­ly.

The Kremlin has been seeking to expand its ties with China, especially since the West imposed wide-ranging sanctions on Moscow to punish it for the annexation of Crimea and an incursion into east Ukraine in 2014.

Russia tops the list of Chinese crude suppliers where it competes with its arch- rival Saudi Arabia, the world’s largest oil exporter.

OPAQUE DEAL

Glencore and QIA agreed to buy a 19.5% stake in Rosneft in December 2016 for over €10.2 billion to help the Kremlin plug budget holes.

The transactio­n coincided with expectatio­ns of political detente between Moscow and Washington after Donald Trump became US president and pledged to improve ties with Moscow.

Rosneft is run by Igor Sechin, a close ally of President Vladimir Putin, who awarded special state decoration­s to the head of Glencore Ivan Glasenberg for executing the transactio­n.

Mr. Putin also awarded state decoration­s to the Russian head of Italian bank Intesa San Paolo, Antonio Fallico, for helping fund the deal with a €5.2-billion loan.

The transactio­ns has, however, raised a lot of questions among bankers and market analysts.

Glencore and QIA never disclosed the final beneficiar­ies of the stake and Intesa could not syndicate the loan from other banks to share risks as most lenders declined to get involved because of new sanctions on Russia.

Intesa said its €5.2-billion loan will be reimbursed following the CEFC deal.

“It always looked as if the Qatar- Glencore deal was hastily arranged so as to allow the privatizat­ion to take place by the end of last year and the proceeds booked to the federal budget,” said Chris Weafer from Macro Advisory consultanc­y.

Last month, Washington imposed further sanctions on Moscow in the strongest action against Russia since 2014 — in part as a response to conclusion­s by US intelligen­ce agencies that Russia meddled in the presidenti­al election.

On Friday, Sechin said QIA and Glencore cut the stakes partially because of a decline in the US dollar against the euro, which made debt servicing more expensive.

Mr. Sechin told reporters CEFC would get access to Rosneft’s oil fields and petrochemi­cal projects in East Siberia to guarantee bigger synergies.

“From Rosneft’s point of view, the arrival of such a partner is positive as it shows that the foreign investors still keep their interest to the Russian oil industry,” said Alexander Kornilov from Aton brokerage in Moscow.

CEFC said the deal would give it annual equity oil production of 42 million tons (840,000 barrels per day) and access to oil and gas reserves of 2.67 billion tons (20 billion barrels).

The deal will be China’s second largest oil and gas acquisitio­n after the $ 15.1- billion purchase of Canada’s Nexen by CNOOC in 2013. Earlier this decade, Beijing also loaned $25 billion to Russia to help it build a pipeline from Siberia. —

 ??  ?? ALEX BEARD, head of oil at trading firm Glencore, looks on during an interview after the opening of a gas station under the franchise G500 in Tlalnepant­la, Mexico on Aug. 17.
ALEX BEARD, head of oil at trading firm Glencore, looks on during an interview after the opening of a gas station under the franchise G500 in Tlalnepant­la, Mexico on Aug. 17.

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