Oil-Related Stocks: Russia Exposure To Stoke Volatility Even If Crude Prices Rise

 | Mar 08, 2022 12:10

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

  • Sanctions on Russia, retaliation bullish for oil
  • Western oil companies should benefit
  • U.S., European companies have exposure in Russia
  • Wave of nationalizations could hit energy patch
  • Shift in U.S. energy policy necessary and could be on horizon

Russia is one of the world’s leading crude oil producers. It's also the most influential non-member of OPEC, the international oil cartel. Indeed, the market now refers to the cartel as OPEC+, the plus being primarily the Russians.

Since 2016, Russian representatives have been a significant factor in the cartel’s production decisions. While Saudi Arabia remains the world’s leading producer, OPEC looks to Riyadh and Moscow for guidance, approval, and cooperation. The Russian oil minister, Alexander Novak, reports directly to Russian President Vladimir Putin. Over the past six years, Putin expanded his sphere of influence in the Middle East, and as a top decision-maker, guiding the world’s oil supplies.

In early 2021, the U.S. handed the cartel a gift when the Biden Administration embarked on a greener energy production and consumption path. Increased regulations on drilling and fracking for oil and gas, cancelation of the Keystone XL pipeline, banning drilling and fracking on federal lands in Alaska, refusal to renew fossil fuel leases, and other pipeline cancelations effectively handed the pricing power back to the cartel. The price of crude oil was rising steadily long before Russia invaded Ukraine, but the invasion has added a risk premium to the energy commodity.

The U.S. and European green energy policies have created an entry barrier for new companies in the traditional hydrocarbon arena. The existing companies are moving towards cleaner energy production while retaining an almost monopoly on extracting oil and gas from the Earth’s crust.

Meanwhile, many U.S. and European integrated oil and oil-related companies have investments and joint ventures with the Russians. The war in Ukraine is likely the end of that cooperation, making the investments go up in a cloud of smoke-filled losses. Sanctions could end the relationships. If they don’t, Russia could throw them out as it retaliates. Russia holds a strong hand in the energy commodity that continues to power the world.

h2 Sanctions On Russia, Retaliation Bullish For Oil/h2

Any doubt whether Russia’s invasion of Ukraine would push crude oil prices higher disappeared last week as the energy commodity exploded to the upside.