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Serbia, Russia: The Best Deal for a Cash-Strapped Belgrade
 

December 24, 2008 | 2037 GMT 

ALEXANDER NEMENOV/AFP/Getty Images
 

Russian President Dmitri Medvedev (R) shakes hands with Serbian President Boris 
Tadic
 

Summary

The Serbian and Russian presidents have signed a "political agreement" for the 
construction of the South Stream gas pipeline in Serbia and an agreement to 
sell 51 percent of the Serbian state-owned oil company Naftna Industrija Srbije 
to Russia's Gazprom Neft. Serbia is cash-strapped and needs to sell something, 
and Russia is the only country in today's financial climate with both the 
willingness and the cash to be a buyer.

Analysis

Serbian President Boris Tadic and Russian President Dmitri Medvedev signed a 
"political agreement" Dec. 24 in Moscow to construct the South Stream gas 
pipeline through Serbia. While in Moscow, the Serbian delegation also signed a 
long-awaited agreement with Gazprom Neft for the sale of 51 percent of the 
Serbian state energy company Naftna Industrija Srbije (NIS) to Gazprom Neft for 
400 million euros (US$560 million). 

The agreements between Serbia and Russia for the sale of NIS and the 
construction of the South Stream pipeline were initially conceived as a single 
package, negotiated near the end of 2007, with Kosovo's independence imminent 
and Russia the only significant counterforce to the new state. At the time, 
underselling NIS to the Russians in exchange for support on Kosovo and 
guarantees of long-term Russian involvement in the region (through the 
construction of South Stream) were vital interests to those in power in 
Belgrade.
 

With the pro-Western Tadic firmly in power following his re-election in 
February and the successful win by his party in the May parliamentary 
elections, Belgrade was expected to renegotiate the deal with the starting 
price tag for NIS closer to its estimated value of just over 2 billion euros 
(US$2.8 billion). 

The current deal, however, may be the best that cash-strapped Serbia can expect 
to get in the current financial climate. Russia is not interested in paying 
NIS's market price, or in making firm guarantees that it will build South 
Stream, but it is probably the only country in today's financial climate with 
both the willingness and the cash to buy NIS. The South Stream project has been 
unbundled from the original NIS-sale package and was signed by Tadic and 
Medvedev as a political agreement, which essentially is non-binding and not 
worth the paper it is written on. At the moment, Russia is concentrating on 
bringing online its Yamal gas fields and updating its own pipeline 
infrastructure, leaving no money for exotic infrastructure adventures 
crisscrossing the Black Sea and the Balkans, which is what South Stream would 
be.

The bottom line is that Serbia needs the money, and NIS is the only asset it 
has to offer. With the global financial crisis hitting Europe hard, freezing 
interbank lending and putting all future deals into question, Belgrade has no 
alternative but to sell NIS to the Russians. The Balkans — including Serbia — 
are particularly hard hit by the crisis, as are firms from the two countries 
that had been most likely to purchase NIS — Austria and Hungary. Hungarian MOL 
is already stretched following its $1.76 billion bid in September for a 
near-majority stake in Croatia's INA. Austrian OMV, while certainly interested 
in NIS, would have had to have scrambled to find a loan to finance the 
purchase. If NIS were to be sold through a tender offer, it would fetch a 
minimum of 800 million euros (more than US$1 billion) for just its assets 
(three refineries, more than 2,000 gas stations, oil fields in Serbia and 
Angola and a distribution network in Serbia).

Sitting on NIS and waiting for the financial situation to improve so that it 
could be auctioned at a higher price would make sense — if Serbia were in a 
fiscal position to do so. It is not. On Dec. 24, Fitch revised Serbia's 
long-term rating to negative from stable, due mainly to its high private-debt 
exposure. The dinar has been sliding against the euro since September, putting 
the vast majority of consumer and business euro-denominated loans — made 
popular in the Balkans by foreign banks that dominate the market — at risk of 
default. Staring at a deficit in 2009, the government already has been forced 
by a "standby agreement" with the International Monetary Fund to make cuts in 
its 2009 budget that could exacerbate social unrest among pensioners, Serbian 
war veterans and students. The government needs cash and needs it right away. 

The extremely poor investment climate is allowing Russia, which may be facing 
economic problems of its own but at least has cold hard cash on hand, to look 
for bargain energy deals across the continent (LUKoil's recent interest in 
Spanish Repsol YPF being a case in point). 

The NIS deal will give Russia a piece of Europe's distribution and retail 
network, something that its energy companies crave. NIS, centrally positioned 
as the key energy company in the Balkans, will give Russia a nationwide company 
from which to expand to adjacent states, including, potentially, EU members 
Bulgaria, Hungary and Romania. However, the deal has enough caveats and 
loopholes for the both sides to back out, which means that the penned agreement 
in Moscow may not represent the last chapter of the NIS-Gazprom Neft saga.

 

 

 

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