Urals, Russia's flagship crude export grade, sat at $51.25 on 6 July, barely moved from the roughly $50 it traded ten days earlier . Brent firmed over the same stretch on the OPEC+ decision and steadying Hormuz flows, so the Urals-Brent discount widened to about $20, beyond the $10-15 band the grade held through 2024-25. 1
Russia's 2026 federal budget still assumes $59 a barrel for its oil, and Urals has sat below that mark since late June. A discount that widens against a firming Brent deepens the fiscal shortfall even during a benchmark rally, because the Russian grade does not travel with it. Oil and gas revenue funds roughly a third of the federal budget, so the gap feeds straight into Moscow's finances.
Shadow-fleet cargoes already clear beneath Russia's fiscal floor, so the market, not any sanctions cap, is setting the near-term ceiling on Urals. That balance could shift within a week: EU ministers decide on 13 July how long to freeze the price cap on Russian oil, a ruling that resets how traders hedge Russian barrels.
