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US extends deadline to April 1 for potential Lukoil buyers

According to four sources who are familiar with the talks, the United States has slowed down?the sale?of the international assets of Russian oil giant Lukoil to use them as a bargaining tool in the Ukraine peace negotiations.

A document viewed by OFAC showed that the U.S. Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) will extend to Thursday the deadline for transactions to be completed from February 28 to April 1.

In recent weeks, U.S. and Russian government officials failed to make a breakthrough during?talks held in Geneva, Abu Dhabi, and Miami, in order to negotiate a deal for peace in Ukraine. According to sources briefed about the meetings, these discussions included 'the U.S. sanction on Russia's largest oil producer, Rosneft and on its second-largest competitor, Lukoil.

The next round between the U.S. and Russia, as well as Ukraine, is scheduled for March.

OFAC has extended the deadline three times to allow potential buyers to negotiate assets worth $22 billion with Lukoil since Washington imposed sanctions against the two Russian oil companies last October.

The sanctions forced Lukoil to sell its international portfolio. This included oilfields and refineries from Iraq to Finland. Over a dozen potential bidders have expressed interest in the sale, ranging from ExxonMobil of the United States to Pornhub's former owner.

Three sources claim that OFAC was handling the asset sale of Lukoil, but recently the process escalated, involving senior officials from the White House, Treasury, and State Departments, with Treasury Sec. Scott Bessent being more directly involved.

The White House, State Department and Treasury have not responded to requests for comment about whether the extension is related to peace talks. Lukoil didn't respond to requests for comments.

Volodymyr Zelenskiy, the Ukrainian president, said that his intelligence services had informed him earlier this month that Russian envoy Kirill Dimitriev had proposed to the Trump Administration an economic deal valued at?at least $12 trillion. According to a source familiar with the deal, it includes Lukoil's assets which could complicate any sale.

Several companies, including the U.S. Carlyle Group and Saudi Arabia's Midad Energy have signed agreements with Lukoil. Todd Boehly, an American billionaire, has also worked with Xtellus Partners, a UAE-based fund, Alliance Investment Partners, as well as Xtellus Partners, a bank.

Chevron is in talks with Texas-based Quantum Capital Group for the portfolio but terms have not been agreed upon yet. Reporting by Anna Hirtenstein in London, Dmitry Zhdannikov and Marwa Rashad in Washington and Timothy Gardner in London; editing by Lisa Shumaker

(source: Reuters)