👁 1
💬 0
📄 Extracted Text (1,939 words)
Subject: Oil discussion and ruble weakness.... [C]
From: Tazia Smith sz: >
Date: Thu, 20 Mar 2014 18:19:32 -0400
To:
Cc: Paul Morris <
Vinit Sahni <
Nav Gupta
Vahe Stepanian
Classification: Confidential
Hi Rich -
I'm sure you've seen plenty on the US sanctions vs. Russia (bloomberg update
below). See this article in the FT:
http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/35d6ae10-
ab9a-11e3-90af-00144feab7de.html#axzz2wXg7CCtv.
The article is another advocacy for the US to sell Strategic Petroleum
Reserves (SPR). It goes over one thesis of economic impact, suggesting that a
sale of 500-750k barrels a day could increase supply and reduce oil prices by
$10-12 dollars. A $10/bbl drop in crude prices could have a $40bn impact to
Russia's export income, according to this author (Paull Verleger, Jr, former
director of the Office of Enerrgy Policy at the US Treasury during the Carter
administration). Things that could offset the SPR supply's impact on prices
include Saudi Arabia reducing supplies, as well as Congress approval delaying
the process.
This thesis ties closely to Jeffrey's outlook on near-term oil prices, and
indirectly to a weak-ruble thesis as Russia's economy would be negatively
impacted. We know Jeffrey thinks the SPR supply will not bring prices down
in
the very near-term (<1mo), and that stems (among several other things, I
suspect) from offsets like those mentioned in the article being likely - not
to be shrugged off.
I found the article to be a good little summary and I liked the quantitative
assessments; I thought you might find it of interest. Spot crude was
actually
down —$1/bbl today. The chart below is of the June14 contract (matures/-
expires
in May as discussed) price action. As you know, Jeffrey's strike on his call
is at 101.
Have a good night!
Tazia
EFTA01479525
June14 Crude Contract - 1-month price history
(Embedded image moved to file: pic14318.gif)
Used with permission of Bloomberg Finance LP
Forwarded by Tazia Smith/db/dbcom on 03/20/2014 05:59 PM
From: "Tazia Smith (DEUTSCHE ASSET MANAG)"
<[email protected]>
To: undisclosed -
recipients:;,
Date: 03/20/2014 05:57
PM
Subject: (BN) Obama Expands Sanctions on Russian Officials to Press
Putin
(BN) Obama Expands Sanctions on Russian Officials to Press Putin
(3)
This has been prepared solely for informational purposes. It is not an offer,
recommendation or solicitation to buy or sell, nor is it an official
confirmation of terms. It is based on information generally available to the
public from sources believed to be reliable. No representation is made that
it
is accurate or complete or that any returns indicated will be achieved.
Changes to assumptions may have a material impact on any returns detailed.
Past performance is not indicative of future returns. Price and availability
are subject to change without notice. Additional information is available
upon
EFTA01479526
request.
--+
Obama Expands Sanctions on Russian Officials to Press Putin (3)
2014-03-20 21:03:23.138 GMT
(Updates with market reaction, lawyer's comment, Hagel
call to Russian defense minister beginning in eighth paragraph.
For more on the conflict in Ukraine, go to EXT2.)
By Roger Runningen and James G. Neuger
March 20 (Bloomberg) -- President Barack Obama expanded
U.S. financial sanctions to 20 more Russian officials,
businessmen and a bank and authorized potential future penalties
that would directly target sectors of the Russian economy.
"We're imposing sanctions on more senior officials of the
Russian government," Obama said on the South Lawn of the White
House. "In addition, we are today sanctioning a number of other
individuals with substantial resources and influence who provide
material support to the Russian leadership, as well as a bank
that provides material support to these individuals."
With Russia poised to annex Crimea and its troops massing
near Ukraine's border to the east and south, the U.S. and the
European Union are moving to coordinate ramped up economic
pressure on Russian President Vladimir Putin and his allies.
Obama is set to travel next week to Europe to consult with EU
leaders, who were meeting today to work on a unified position.
Today's action is against 20 individuals, members of the
Russian government and business leaders who the U.S. says have
ties to Putin, and adds to the seven Russian officials and four
people from Ukraine who already were subjected to sanctions. It
also includes Bank Rossiya in St. Petersburg, which U.S.
officials said has $10 billion in assets and is the 17th largest
bank in Russia.
Sanctions Targets
Those targeted in the latest round include: Evgeni
Viktorovich Bushmin, deputy speaker of the Federation Council of
the Russian Federation; Andrei Fursenko, an aide to Putin;
Vladimir Yakunin, chief executive officer of OAO Russian
Railways; billionaire Gennady Timchenko, a co-founder of oil
trader Gunvor Group Ltd; businessman Arkady Rotenberg, a former
judo partner of Putin whose companies won more than $7 billion
of contracts for the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, and his
brother, Boris, and Yuri Kovalchuk, a partner at Bank Rossiya,
according to a list released by the Treasury Department.
EFTA01479527
Eight of the 20 were previously designated by the EU.
The sanctions, based on an executive order issued March 17,
ban the individuals' entry, freeze any personal assets they may
have in the U.S. and bar them from doing business with any U.S.
company or financial institution.
A U.S. official, who briefed reporters on condition of
anonymity to discuss the details, said the individuals won't
have access to any U.S. financial services and will have
difficulty conducting transactions in dollars. Bank Rossiya also
will be frozen out of dollar transactions.
Russian Economy
Obama also signed a new executive order, his third in
response to the Ukraine crisis, authorizing though not
implementing economic sanctions affecting parts of the Russian
economy. They included financial services, energy, metals and
mining, defense and engineering
"This is not our preferred outcome," he said. "These
sanctions would not only have a significant impact on the
Russian economy, but also could be disruptive to the global
economy."
Russian stocks traded in New York fell the most in more
than two weeks after Obama's announcement. The Bloomberg Russia-
U.S. Equity index of the most-traded Russian shares in the U.S.
dropped 3.3 percent to 80.10 at 4 p.m. in New York.
Standard & Poor's cut its outlook for Russia to negative
because of the risks posed by the conflict, affirming Russia's
credit rated at BBB, the second-lowest investment grade.
Russia's Reaction
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Russia was surprised
by some of the names on today's list, and considers the use of
sanctions unacceptable. It's not true that Putin is an investor
in Gunvor as the U.S. alleges, he said.
In retaliation for the new U.S. sanctions, the Russian
government barred entry of nine U.S. officials, including House
Speaker John Boehner of Ohio and Senate Foreign Relations
Committee Chairman Robert Menendez of New Jersey.
"The speaker is proud to be included on a list of those
willing to stand against Putin's aggression," Boehner's
spokesman, Michael Steel, said in an e-mail.
Edward J. Krauland, a partner at the law firm Steptoe &
Johnson who's a specialist on international sanctions, said
targeting individuals probably won't have a big an impact on
Russia's actions. Hitting Russian economic sectors would.
"I don't even think if they targeted Putin it would bring
Mr. Putin to the table," Krauland said. "If you can isolate
particular sectors of a country's economy that are significant,
disproportionate parts of the economy, you're going to impose a
EFTA01479528
hurt on that country."
EU Debate
The EU, with closer economic ties to Russia, hasn't gone as
far as the U.S. The 28-nation bloc saddled 21 Russian and
Crimean officials with asset freezes and visa bans on March 17,
and may widen that list to include close Putin associates at a
summit in Brussels today and tomorrow.
Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany, Russia's biggest EU
trading partner, said it's too early to start economic
retaliation. "We will make very clear that in the case of
further escalation we will be ready to introduce economic
sanctions," Merkel told reporters before the EU summit.
Sanctions require the agreement of all EU governments, a
consensus-building process that can't match Putin's speed in
mobilizing troops in Crimea, staging the secession referendum
and moving toward annexation.
Ukraine Tensions
Tensions continue to rise in the region. The government in
Kiev said yesterday it plans to reinforce its eastern border
with Russia and withdraw troops from Crimea, ceding control of
the Black Sea peninsula. Obama said Russia's continuing military
movements carry "dangerous risks of escalation."
U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel spoke by phone today
with Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu to clarify Russia's
intentions for its troops amassed along the border with Ukraine,
Rear Admiral John Kirby, Hagel's spokesman, said at a news
conference.
Shoigu told Nagel that Russian troops are arrayed along the
border only for military exercises, Kirby said. Russian troops
won't cross the border into Ukraine and "would take no
aggressive action," Kirby said Hagel was told.
"It was a lengthy call, lasting about an hour, and I think
it's fair to say that at times it was direct," Kirby said of
the exchange.
NATO Allies
Obama said that while in Europe, he will reinforce the U.S.
commitment to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and the
defense of any member that comes under attack. Those allies
include several on the front lines of the confrontation, such as
former Soviet satellite states Poland and Lithuania, which got
visits by Vice President Joe Biden earlier this week.
Obama has emphasized that there are no plans to confront
Russia militarily.
"We do not need to trigger an actual war with Russia,"
Obama said in an interview with St. Louis television station
EFTA01479529
KSDK recorded at the White House yesterday. "The Ukrainians
don't want that, nobody would want that."
In his remarks today, Obama again urged the U.S. Congress
to finish work on an aid package for Ukraine, which includes $1
billion in loan guarantees.
The aid has been tied up by opposition from House
Republicans to a provision that would transfer funds to boost
the U.S. share at the International Monetary Fund. The
administration argues that the funding would help the IMF assist
Ukraine.
"Expressions of support are not enough," Obama said. "We
need action."
Loan Guarantee
The European Commission, the EU's executive arm, yesterday
proposed adding 1 billion euros ($1.4 billion) to a previously
approved 610 million euros in budget support for Ukraine. The
European aid would accompany an IMF package that's being
negotiated.
"The most urgent thing to do is to make all our efforts to
sustain a credible, stable, viable, democratic, prosperous
Ukraine," the commission's president, Jose Barroso, said today.
EU leaders will also sign the political provisions of a trade
accord with Ukraine tomorrow.
For Related News and Information:
IMF Bailout Fatigue Among Republicans Delaying Ukraine Aid
NSN N2QRRR6JIJUZ <GO>
Merkel, Hollande Warn on Russia Sanctions Revealing EU Split
NSN N2ORQ06KLVR5 <GO>
Ukraine Military Concedes on Crimea as Russia Tightens Grip
NSN N2QONJ6JTSF1 <GO>
Top Government Stories: GTOP <GO>
White House Stories: NI EXE <GO>
--With assistance from Julianna Goldman, Kasia Klimasinska,
Jonathan Allen and David Lerman in Washington, Ilya Arkhipov in
Moscow, Angela Greiling Keane in Miami and Halia Pavliva in New
York.
To contact the reporters on this story:
Roger Runningen in Washington at +1-202-624-1884 or
[email protected];
James G. Neuger in Brussels at +32-2-285-4301 or
[email protected]
To contact the editors responsible for this story:
Steven Komarow at +1-202-654-4302 or
[email protected]
Joe Sobczyk, Michael Shepard
EFTA01479530
(Embedded image moved to file: pic14030.gif)
Tazia Smith
Director I Key Client Partners - US
Deutsche Bank Securities Inc
Deutsche Asset & Wealth Management
345 Park Avenue, 26th Floor
New York, NY 10154
Email
(Embedded image moved to file: pic13987.gif)
EFTA01479531
ℹ️ Document Details
SHA-256
b7fe19109d246c31e890674d2b651f15bf636a1fb53b414aa007b5424feff596
Bates Number
EFTA01479525
Dataset
DataSet-10
Type
document
Pages
7
💬 Comments 0