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US Treasury: sanctions against Rosneft and Lukoil reduce Russia's oil revenue

The U.S. Treasury announced on Monday that U.S. sanction against Russian oil giants Rosneft, and Lukoil have already reduced Russian oil revenues. They are also likely to reduce Russian oil sales in the future.

In a press release, the Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control stated that their analysis of the first market impact of sanctions announced on the 22nd of October showed they were "having their intended effect of dampening Russian revenue by lowering Russian oil prices and therefore the ability of the country to fund its war against Ukraine."

The Treasury's action was one of the strongest U.S. sanction since Russia invaded Ukraine on a large scale in February 2022. It is also the first direct sanction imposed by Donald Trump since he took office in January.

The deadline set by the sanctions is November 21, when companies must end their business with Rosneft or Lukoil. Violators could be disconnected from the dollar-based system of financial transactions.

It was not clear how Treasury would enforce the sanctions. China and India are the two biggest buyers of Russian crude oil.

OFAC's analysis found that prices for several grades of Russian crude oil were at an all-time low. It also noted that a dozen of the largest Indian and Chinese buyers of Russian crude had announced their intention to stop buying Russian crude for December deliveries.

LSEG Workspace showed Monday that benchmark Urals crude was loaded in Russia's Black Sea oil port of Novorossiysk On November 12, oil traded at $45.35 a barrel, the lowest price since March 2023. The Russians were just starting to build a "shadow" fleet of tankers at that time to avoid the G7-led $60 per barrel price cap imposed in December 202023.

Brent crude futures traded at $64.03 Monday, up from $62.71 the previous day. Urals Novorossiysk climbed to $47.01 Monday. After a drone and missile attack by Ukraine, loadings at the Black Sea Port have resumed.

Reports earlier in the month indicated that Russian oil discount to Brent had increased as Indian and Chinese refiners reduced purchases due to U.S. sanction.

A Treasury spokesperson stated that the sanctions "starved Putin's war-machine" and the Department "is ready to take additional action if needed to stop the senseless killing in Ukraine". (Reporting and editing by Cynthia Osterman; David Lawder)

(source: Reuters)