Cashing out in Russia? One sure signal of Vladimir Putin's actual political plans will be activity in big Russian dealmaking. One of the most active betting lines around the world is how Putin will manage to stay in the driver's seat after he's forced to step down as Russian president in March. If there's a rash of huge buyouts, mergers and share sales, it would be a sign of uncertainty of what comes after the presidential elections. It could mean that some of those who have gotten rich under Putin are cashing out. Dmitry Zhdannikov of Reuters has an interesting piece today suggesting that Gazprom may finally go after half of BP's venture with the Russian-held TNK, and that favored oligarch Oleg Deripaska may want to buy into Norilsk Nickel, the world's biggest producer of nickel and palladium.
Noticing Turkmenistan: I receive lots of emails and calls these days on whether the talk of deals and reform in Turkmenistan is realistic. David Lee Smith over at
Motley Fool has a piece talking about the investment side. In a
posting yesterday, Smith notes the international contest going on over the republic’s natural gas now that President
Saparmurat Niyazov is dead. He’s only putting Turkmenistan on a watch list, which is about right. He does get it wrong when he says that
Russia is the republic's only export route –
Turkmenistan has a small natural gas pipeline into
Iran. But essentially he's on the right track -- yesterday my friend Marat Gurt of Reuters
reported a Russian announcement that it’s closer to sealing a pipeline construction deal that would virtually monopolize
Turkmen gas. Look for another
U.S. or European Union shuttle mission to Ashkabad.
For investment community readers of this blog, take a look at Smith’s prior posts on oil services companies (here and here). Given the coming demise of Big Oil, I’ve been suggesting that shareholders sell the majors and shift to the technology-laden companies that will be in huge demand by the new version of the Seven Sisters – state-owned oil companies in Venezuela, Russia, China, Saudi Arabia, Kazakhstan and so on.
Photo:
ArgenbergRights:
Creative CommonsLabels: big oil, BP, Caspian, deripaska, Gazprom, norilsk, oil, oil book, oil pipelines, Putin, russia oil, tnk, Turkmenistan
2 Comments:
Since when is Potanin "not favored" by the Kremlin? Or is this a case of Deripaska simply being more favored?
I'd say that Deripaska is definitely more favored than Potanin. Just look at the trajectory of their respective holdings under Putin. (That doesn't mean that Potanin is disfavored; he won't end up an exile in London)
The interesting thing for me isn't whether Gazprom will swallow up the Russian half of TNK-BP. It's whether BP will hold on, and if so how much. thanks for the comment. Best Steve
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