Scraping the barrel
The Kremlin is facing a massive budget deficit due to the low cost of Russian crude oil

The price of Russian crude oil fell to lows last month that have not been seen since the global pandemic in 2020. The sharp decline began immediately after the US imposed sanctions on Russia’s two largest oil companies, Rosneft and Lukoil, in October.
Given that Russia is in the early days of a recession, the country’s oil barons will not be the only captains of industry asking the Finance Ministry to grant them preferential terms.
Increasing VAT will add one to two percentage points to inflation, while slowing the economy, which is already teetering on the brink of recession, potentially creating a vicious circle.

Germany approves nuclear fuel expansion involving Russian atomic agency Rosatom

Putin attempts to shore up energy exports to China in call to Xi as India ‘agrees’ to stop buying Russian oil

Russia mulls legalisation of online casinos in desperate search for fresh tax revenue to fund war

US investment fund attempts to recoup tsarist-era debt using frozen Russian assets

EU lowers price cap on Russian oil as shadow fleet continues to flout international sanctions
Report calls out EU ‘complicity’ in funding Kremlin war machine as imports of Russian LNG rise

Russian-held Telegram bonds worth $500 million frozen due to Western sanctions
Double whammy
Could sanctions and drone strikes lead to the collapse of Russian oil production and end its funding of the Kremlin’s war machine?

Lukoil requests more time to sell its overseas assets as US sanctions loom


