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Rosneft, a Russian oil company, says its Q1 net income was $2.2 billion less than a half-year ago.

Rosneft, Russia's biggest oil producer, reported a net profit Friday of 170 billion Russian roubles (2.19 billion dollars). This is less than half the level from a year ago due to higher interest rates, sanctions, and a stronger ruble.

Igor Sechin has been a staunch ally of Vladimir Putin and Rosneft CEO Igor Sechin. He has often criticised the Russian central bank's tight monetary policies.

Since October, the central bank has maintained its key rate at 21% as it has fought against persistently high inflation.

The rate has increased since the early 2000s when Russia was still recovering after the chaos of the collapse of the Soviet Union.

Sechin stated in a press release that "during the reporting period the company operated under conditions of a further deterioration in the macroeconomic climate, including a decline in the price for Russian Urals oil, an expansion of discounts to global oil benchmarks, new sanctions as well as the strengthening of the Russian rouble."

Rosneft reported that interest costs increased by 1.8 times in the first quarter.

Rosneft didn't provide a comparison to the net income of the previous year, but it did report last year that its first-quarter net income for 2024 reached 399 billion Russian roubles.

The company reported a net profit increase from 158 billion Russian roubles during the previous three-month period.

The company also reported that the revenue for the quarter of January-March decreased by 8.5% compared to the previous one to 2.3 trillion Russian roubles, due to the lower oil prices in roubles.

Rosneft reported that the EBITDA (earnings before taxes, depreciation, and amortization) fell by 15.5% compared to the previous quarter, falling to 598 billion Russian roubles.

(source: Reuters)