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Europe
World Bank: Russia may need help if oil falls more
2008-12-19
MOSCOW (AP) - Russia would come under crippling financial pressure and may need to raise money externally if oil languishes at an average of $30 a barrel over the next two years, the World Bank predicted Friday. The bleak scenario would mark a rapid unraveling of Russia's oil-fueled economic gains over the past eight years, during which time the government has paid down most of its foreign debt and built up a vast stockpile of international reserves.
The heart [urp] bleeds ...
"If oil prices in 2009 and 2010 average $30 a barrel, that would be a nightmare scenario for a global economy," Zeljko Bogetic, the World Bank's chief economist in Russia told investors on Friday. "The pressures on the current account and public finances in Russia would quickly rise to a point where the financing constraint would become so sharp that it's possible even to envisage Russia's return from a creditor to international organisations to (that of) a borrower."

At $50 a barrel, Russia could drain much of its reserve funds and run budgetary deficits, but would not face a "meltdown" scenario, said Bogetic.

Oil prices took a sharp turn downward this week, with the February light sweet crude contract trading just over $42 a barrel--more than $100 lower than its July peak--despite a large output cut pledged this week by oil producers' cartel OPEC.

The World Bank currently forecasts an average oil price of $75 a barrel over the next two years, said Bogetic.

Among emerging markets, Russia has been one of the hardest hit by the global financial crisis and plunging oil prices, the mainstay of the Russian economy. These factors have put the national currency under intense strain and triggered massive stock market losses and capital outflows from the country.

Russia, which grew at over 8 percent last year, is facing a severe slowdown in growth, and possibly even recession next year, analysts say. Torrid figures released earlier this week showed that industrial output had plunged 10.8 percent in November from the previous month, signaling a dramatic slowdown in the final quarter.

"Clearly we are in the middle of a major growth recession in Russia," said Bogetic. "I would call it a growth recession, not an output recession--yet."

He said the World Bank had tweaked its earlier projection of 3 percent growth next year to between 2-3 percent.
Posted by:GolfBravoUSMC

#11  NET POSTERS > proclaim that Russia's economy cannot survive = will utterly inevitably collapse iff world oil prices stay at US$30.00 -$40.000???
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2008-12-19 20:47  

#10  Gee, I guess doing everything they could to get back in the "World's Biggest Assholes" list wasn't all that great an idea, huh?

Like I said several years ago now, when they manage to elect someone who is NOT either a) a hopeless lush or b) an ex-KGB stooge and wannabe dictator, I'll take them seriously. Maybe.
Posted by: mojo   2008-12-19 16:47  

#9  ^^^^^^^^^^^Listen to Glenmore. He know's the black arts....
Posted by: .5MT   2008-12-19 16:42  

#8  tipover,
Russia's like everywhere else - the big, easy stuff has been found and substantially developed. The next barrel is going to be harder to find, harder to produce, and cost more.
That said, financing, management, and engineering DO matter (Russian engineering is actually pretty good if the first two problems can be overcome), so part of the production fall-off is not resource based.
Posted by: Glenmore   2008-12-19 16:34  

#7  Ed, are the declines due to decline in resources or problems with infrastructure? Can they continue to develop what they have or are they not doing so since Putin and his pals took over?

Infrastructure can be fixed, it's just Engineering and money. Management problems can be more difficult to deal with in a Russian political environment.
Posted by: tipover   2008-12-19 14:50  

#6  dropping = declining

Russian oil production had been rising until 2007. 2008 production will be less than 2007 while domestic consumption is up. So Russia hasn't been able to take full advantage of $100+ prices. Future years look like a steady decline. Same for Russian natural gas.
Posted by: ed   2008-12-19 13:31  

#5  I imagine the World Bank would look askance should one of their clients attempt to harass the neighbors.
Posted by: trailing wife   2008-12-19 13:27  

#4  Dropping production is, I suspect, harder said than done.

It would require a complete rework of the business model and a complete restructure of the oil business.
Going full-on is easy. Pumping just enough to support prices is a job I would not want. It would be much more painful in terms of unemployment and cashflow management than most businesspersons are capable of. It would be much easier to just pump what you can and trust the market.
Posted by: bigjim-ky   2008-12-19 12:43  

#3  Russia will be fine. They have the second largest foreign exchange reserves in the world (behind China), around $500 billion.

Longer term they need to worry about dropping production. Foreign oil companies aren't likely to go in again after their operations were seized by Putin and his cronies.
Posted by: ed   2008-12-19 12:34  

#2  Still feel like being a bully, Putie-pie?
Posted by: DarthVader   2008-12-19 12:27  

#1  tough
Posted by: rabid whitetail   2008-12-19 12:14  

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