Urals, Russia's flagship export grade, held in the high-$40s to mid-$50s on 13 July while Brent climbed toward multi-week highs, staying below the $59 a barrel Moscow's 2026 budget assumes. TankerMap assessed the grade at $48.95 on 13 July, down from $51.25 on 6 July 1, while a second retail tracker put it nearer $55 around 12 July 2. The gap between the two softens the exact figure, not the direction: both readings sit under the federal-budget floor.
Brent added about $6 over the same run, so on the desk's own calculation from the flat prices the discount to Dated Brent widened further, beyond the $10-a-barrel India and $20-a-barrel Baltic split of 7 July . TankerMap publishes the flat price alone, so the widening is a derivation from the two legs, not a lifted assessment.
The squeeze compounds through a rally that should have relieved it. Oil and gas fund roughly a third of Russia's federal budget, and with The National Wealth Fund already drawing down reserves rather than banking a surplus, a Urals price stuck below $59 tightens the fiscal vice even as the headline benchmark rises. The wider discount hands Indian and Chinese buyers a better basis, letting state refiners lock cheaper term barrels regardless of how Brussels votes the cap freeze.
