Monday 19 May 2014

Bloomberg: Putin’s Shanghai Expedition Stokes Gazprom Deal Talk

President Vladimir Putin’s planned China visit this week is helping spark the longest rally in OAO Gazprom since 2006 as speculation mounts the Russian leader will return with a long-sought gas supply agreement.
Gazprom, the world’s largest natural-gas producer, has climbed for nine days, rallying 16 percent over the period to 147.29 rubles ($4.26) in Moscow. The stock has gained 14 percent this month, compared with a 1.1 percent advance in the Stoxx 600 Oil & Gas index and the MSCI Emerging Markets Energy index’s 7.1 percent increase.
The stock is surging as traders interpret the president’s visit as a sign Russia is on the verge of getting the long-term gas supply contract it has sought for a decade. Putin is turning to Asia as the West expands sanctions tied to the incursion in Ukraine. After failing to agree on financial terms in previous talks, rising demand for fuel in China has pushed prices to a level that will probably be acceptable to both sides, Bank of America Corp. said in a May 16 report.
Russia and China are closer to a deal than they’ve ever been before,” Karen Kostanian, an analyst at Bank of America, said by phone from Moscow last week. “While Russia seeks to diversify its natural gas exports away from Europe, China wants to diversify its fuel imports.”
Gazprom will have to spend about $56 billion through 2019 to build a new pipeline to China and develop the Kovykta and Chayanda gas fields in eastern Siberia to supply the gas, Kostanian said.

China Gas Holdings Ltd., which supplies natural gas to the city of Harbin in Heilongjiang province that shares a border with Russia, gained as much as 7.3 percent in Hong Kong today.

Gazprom’s stock trades in Moscow, London and New York and it is seeking a listing in Singapore, spokesman Sergei Kupriyanov said on May 15 in Moscow. He didn’t respond to a message seeking comment on the company’s plans in Asia left outside of normal business hours in Moscow on May 16.
Gazprom’s American depositary receipts rose 6.5 percent to $8.40 last week. It was the best performer on the Bloomberg index of the most-traded Russian shares in the U.S, which gained 2 percent.
“Investors are waiting for positive news from the China visit,” Oleg Popov, who helps oversee $1 billion at Allianz Investments, the asset-management arm of Europe’s biggest insurer, said by e-mail in Moscow on May 16. “Speculators are expecting a gas supply agreement with the Chinese partners.”
Allianz’s Popov said he will consider selling Gazprom shares when the price reaches 160 rubles.
Source: Bloomberg

Popular Posts