Rosneft
may back out of Morgan Stanley oil unit deal: sources
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[September 25, 2014]
By Dmitry Zhdannikov
LONDON (Reuters) - Rosneft <ROSN.MM>,
Russia's biggest crude oil producer, may back out of a deal to buy
Morgan Stanley <MS.N>'s oil trading unit because Western sanctions make
it virtually impossible to finance day-to-day operations, three sources
close to the state-controlled company said.
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The people said the chances of the deal going through range from
"possible" to "highly unlikely."
The business in question trades actual barrels of oil instead of
just contracts linked to the price of crude. Morgan Stanley is under
U.S. pressure to sell the unit because regulators regard physical
oil trading as too risky for a major bank to own because
unpredictable events like oil tanker leaks could expose it to
billions of dollars in liability.
A spokesman for Morgan Stanley declined to comment. Ruth Porat, the
bank's chief financial officer, said in July she expected the deal
to close later this year. Rosneft declined official comment.
Rosneft agreed to buy the unit in December. Since then, the United
States and the European Union have slapped wide-ranging sanctions on
Russia's energy and military sectors to punish Moscow for its
incursion into Ukraine. Rosneft's chief Igor Sechin, a close ally of
Russian President Vladimir Putin, has been on the U.S. sanctions
list since April. Rosneft itself was added to the list in July.
Rosneft has enough cash to buy the Morgan Stanley unit, which
sources said carries a price tag of between $300 million to $400
million. But to operate day-to-day, the business requires billions
of dollars of bank lines of credit, funding that's difficult to
secure given the sanctions.
Reuters couldn't learn the precise size of these credit lines, but
trading houses that compete with Morgan Stanley such as Vitol,
[VITOLV.UL] Mercuria and Trafigura [TRAFGF.UL] each have $30 billion
to $40 billion worth of credit lines with dozens of banks.
"This deal just cannot go through. It is not an issue of finding
$300 million to buy the business. Rosneft has the money. But it
won't be able to operate it," one Russian-based source with direct
knowledge of the matter said.
One remaining obstacle for the deal is approval from the Committee
on Foreign Investment in the United States, a regulatory group that
vets mergers and acquisitions that may affect U.S. security. CFIUS
has asked Rosneft and Morgan Stanley for more information about the
deal, without approving it or rejecting it, a step that lawyers said
is not unusual for a transaction under review.
One Rosneft source said talks with CFIUS were still continuing: "The
U.S. bureaucracy has simply asked for more information. We are still
in the game."
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Others are less sure. A Western banking source who works with
Rosneft said the company believes it could not do much with assets
of a U.S.-regulated bank - even if it was allowed to buy them -
because of sanctions.
BORROWING FROM CHINA
In August, Rosneft applied for a $42 billion loan from a state
wealth fund to help it weather sanctions. Last week, a Russian
deputy prime minister said the government is considering the
applications.
For now, Rosneft, which generates $30 billion in cash flow a year,
is meeting its financing needs from internal resources. It can also
borrow from China, which has made available billions of dollars of
credit lines to Russia.
Morgan Stanley has been trying to sell its oil trading division for
almost two years. Previous attempts to sell to buyers in the Middle
East and Asia failed due to price and operational differences,
according to market sources.
The failure to sell the unit may benefit the bank because revenue in
commodity trading businesses has been rising this year as markets
have gyrated.
Sources told Reuters in July that after more than a year of scaling
back, Morgan Stanley has started expanding its commodity division
again with plans to hire traders, sales staff and other
professionals in the United States.
(Reporting by Dmitry Zhdannikov in London, additional reporting by
Lauren LaCapra in New York, editing by Dan Wilchins and John
Pickering)
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