Exclusive: Oil wars - how
Kremlin's $13 billion Indian deal almost fell apart
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[November 16, 2016]
By Dmitry Zhdannikov, Nidhi Verma and Katya Golubkova
LONDON/NEW
DELHI/MOSCOW (Reuters) - A multi-billion-dollar Russian deal to buy
Indian refiner Essar was nearly sunk at the eleventh hour by a rival bid
from Saudi Arabia as the two oil superpowers vie for supremacy across
the world.
The deal between Essar and a consortium led by Kremlin oil giant Rosneft
appeared dead in the water two months ago after Saudi state energy firm
Aramco weighed in, according to seven Russia, India and Saudi-based
industry sources familiar with or involved in the negotiations.
It was salvaged due to the involvement of Russian President Vladimir
Putin and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who were keen for it go
through, and after the consortium agreed to pay $13 billion - more than
double what Rosneft had initially valued Essar at, sources told Reuters.
This made the refiner the biggest-ever foreign acquisition in India and
Russia's largest outbound deal.
The tussle for Essar - a state-of-the-art plant in the world's
fastest-growing fuel market - illustrates the growing battle for oil
markets between Russia and Saudi Arabia, the world's two largest crude
exporters.
It also sheds light on the challenges OPEC member Saudi Arabia and
non-OPEC Russia - which are also fighting a proxy conflict in Syria's
civil war - will face in trying to clinch a global agreement to limit
output growth to prop up oil prices.
The full details of how the Essar deal was struck remain unclear. Two
industry sources said it was rescued thanks to the involvement of Putin
and Modi while three other sources said Rosneft had simply outbid Saudi
Aramco.
Officials in Modi's office declined to comment while Putin's spokesman
Dmitry Peskov denied there was any Kremlin intervention in the deal.
"Naturally, we defend the interests of our companies. Of course we lobby
for them, especially on such large deals," said Peskov, but added that
in the case of Essar "there were no orders from the Kremlin".
"It was a corporate decision by Rosneft to gain synergies via
cooperation with India," he said.
Rosneft and Saudi Aramco declined to comment.
Essar said it had held discussions with several potential buyers but had
gone with the Rosneft consortium because their offer was considered the
most attractive. It denied there was any intervention from Putin or Modi.
SHOWDOWN
Rosneft boss Igor Sechin is keen to buy refining assets around the world
to guarantee outlets for Russian oil. He had been negotiating since 2014
to buy 49 percent of Essar from its owners, Indian brothers Ravi and
Shashi Ruia, and the two parties had been in exclusive talks since July
2015 when a preliminary deal was signed.
While the exact amount Rosneft was prepared to offer for the stake at
that stage is unclear, Russian and Indian industry sources said it
valued the whole of Essar at about $5.7 billion.
However it became apparent that there were problems with the deal in
early September, when Sechin traveled to India to meet the Ruia
brothers, flying from Hangzhou, China, where he had been part of Putin's
G20 summit delegation.
Sechin walked into the meeting with the Ruia brothers soon after landing
in India at 1 a.m., determined to close the deal, according to sources
briefed on the discussions.
As the meeting started, one of the brothers told Sechin the deal process
had been going on for too long, the exclusivity period had expired in
July and Essar was now talking to other parties.
Those other parties included Saudi Aramco, he said.
According to the sources familiar with how the meeting unfolded, Sechin
responded by saying that if Essar walked away from the deal it risked
losing Russian financial and oil-supply support.
The Ruia brothers then said the talks with Rosneft were over and called
an abrupt end to the meeting.
"People started leaving the room, embarrassed," one of the sources said.
Another source said the Essar management had drafted a statement to say
the deal with Rosneft was off.
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An oil refinery of Essar Oil, which runs India's second biggest
private sector refinery, is pictured in Vadinar in the western state
of Gujarat, India, October 4, 2016. REUTERS/Amit Dave/File Photo
Rosneft and Essar declined to comment on what transpired at the meeting,
or on whether such a statement had existed. Sechin and the Ruia brothers
could not be reached for comment.
Three Saudi-based sources familiar with details of talks between Essar
and Saudi Aramco said the firm was seriously considering buying Essar.
One of the sources said Aramco was prepared to pay up to $9 billion for
all or most of the refiner.
Aramco declined to comment on whether it had made a bid.
TOO BIG TO FAIL
In the end, however, the Rosneft-Essar deal proved to be too big to
fail.
For India, a deal collapse or a delay because of talks with another
party would set back Modi's drive to clean up India's $140 billion
mountain of bad debt given Essar's multi-billion-dollar debts to local
and foreign banks after years of rapid expansion.
For Russia, the deal in the huge Indian market represented an important
milestone in building a global oil empire despite Western sanctions
imposed on Russia over its actions in Ukraine.
Facing the Saudi competition, Rosneft formed a consortium that bought 98
per cent of the refiner plus a fuel terminal for $13 billion. The
Kremlin oil firm bought 49 percent - below the 50 percent level that
would have fallen foul of Western sanctions - with Swiss trading house
Trafigura and Russian private investment group UCP buying the other 49
percent.
According to the Indian and Russian industry sources, Rosneft and Essar
returned to the negotiating table within days of the spat in early
September, and the deal was finally struck.
One of the sources said there was a fierce battle between Essar and
Rosneft over the terms. They said the Russian-led consortium was forced
to outbid the Saudi offer, which they said comprised a combination of
cash, long-term low interest credit and oil supplies.
Trafigura declined to comment on how the deal came together, while UCP
did not reply to a written request asking for comment. Washington said
the deal did not violate sanctions.
The deal was signed in Mauritius on Oct. 14, a day before a formal
announcement on the sidelines of a BRICS summit in Goa where Putin and
Modi met. The leaders also oversaw the signing of a raft of other
transactions including India agreeing to pay $5 billion for Russian
long-range air defense missile systems.
Two industry sources said the Essar deal had first been discussed by
Putin and Modi as far back as May 2014 on the sidelines of the St.
Petersburg Economic Forum, Russia's main investor show.
It was unclear what form - if any - high-level government intervention
might have taken after the September dispute.
But the two sources said that without political will in Moscow and New
Delhi, an agreement could not have been struck.
"Putin and Modi saved that deal," said one.
(Additional reporting by Rania el Gamal; Writing by Dmitry Zhdannikov;
Editing by Pravin Char)
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