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European Oil Markets
26JUN

GL 131F resets the Lukoil sale clock

3 min read
14:17UTC

OFAC issued General Licence 131F on 28 May, running the Lukoil European-refinery divestment to a 27 June deadline, ten days behind GL 134C's vessel-cover lapse.

EconomicAssessed
Key takeaway

Six rollovers in, the Lukoil clock is a low-carry June option layered on a divergence already visible in the prints.

OFAC issued General Licence 131F on 28 May, the sixth iteration of the Lukoil-sale series, superseding 131E of 29 April and running negotiation rights to a 27 June clock 1. It authorises talks and contingent contracts for the sale of Lukoil International GmbH (the Swiss holding company for Lukoil's non-Russian refineries), not the transfer itself. The licence sits ten days behind GL 134C, whose Russian in-transit vessel cover lapses on 17 June , so two Russia-supply deadlines now compress into one fortnight.

LIG holds ISAB (the Priolo Gargallo complex in Sicily, roughly 800kbd), Neftochim Burgas in Bulgaria and Petrotel Ploiesti in Romania: close to a million barrels a day of throughput on Adriatic and Med sour runs. The companion FAQ 1224 sets the buyer terms: complete severance from Lukoil, funds owed parked in a US-jurisdiction blocked account, no upfront value transferred 2. That structure forces a buyer to front capital with zero recourse, which is why the deal has not closed through six rollovers.

The arbitrage sits in the divergence. Brent below $95 is pricing the Iran ceasefire while the regulatory calendar tightens into late June, so a desk fading the flat-price premium can hold long optionality on the June crude legs for little carry. The base rate cuts the other way: this series rolled six times, and 134B gave way to 134C before it . Read the position as the gap between a relaxing screen and a tightening compliance pool, with the June dates as the option on top, not as a bet on a hard cliff.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

OFAC is the US government office that enforces financial sanctions. When Russia was sanctioned, its oil company Lukoil was barred from operating freely in Western markets. Lukoil owns three European refineries, including a giant one in Sicily that processes nearly a million barrels of oil a day. The US has been issuing temporary licences allowing a buyer to negotiate a purchase of those refineries, but each licence keeps expiring without a deal. The latest licence, GL 131F, extends the deadline to 27 June 2026 and is the sixth in a row. A companion ruling (FAQ 1224) says that any buyer must deposit the full purchase price in a blocked account with no guarantee of ever getting it back if the deal falls through, and cannot give Lukoil any money upfront. That condition is why six deadlines have passed without a close: no commercial buyer wants to front hundreds of millions with zero security.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

GL 131F's sixth extension without a close traces to two separable causes operating at different levels.

The proximate cause is the FAQ 1224 blocked-account condition itself: requiring a buyer to provide full purchase capital with no recourse to Lukoil and no upfront value flowing to Lukoil eliminates the seller's incentive to engage, making voluntary divestiture structurally irrational for Lukoil at any price below replacement cost of the assets.

The structural cause is the G7's inability to agree a mandatory divestiture order: absent an EU-level asset-seizure regulation or a US executive order compelling the sale, OFAC can authorise but not compel, and GL 131F is the sixth iteration of that authorise-without-compelling architecture.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    If no buyer closes by 27 June under GL 131F conditions, OFAC must issue GL 131G or allow 1,016kbd of Mediterranean refining capacity to fall into an unlicenced grey area, repricing Med heavy-sweet differentials.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Consequence

    Two OFAC deadlines (GL 134C on 17 June, GL 131F on 27 June) compressing into the same fortnight amplifies June calendar risk for European crude and product spreads.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Opportunity

    A sovereign-backed buyer (Italian state or Gulf SWF) that can absorb the FAQ 1224 blocked-account condition secures 800kbd of Mediterranean refining at distressed-asset pricing.

    Short term · Suggested
First Reported In

Update #3 · OFAC loads a June squeeze the screen ignores

EIA· 29 May 2026
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