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European Oil Markets
15JUN

OFAC signs GL 134C, third Russia bridge

3 min read
11:33UTC

Bradley T. Smith signed General License 134C at 14:05 EDT on Monday 18 May, reinstating Western vessel services on Russian crude loaded by 17 April and reversing the cliff the market had priced two days earlier.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

GL 134C reopened insurance and classification cover, not a price number, so Urals stabilises rather than rallies.

OFAC Director Bradley T. Smith signed General License 134C at 14:05 EDT on Monday 18 May, authorising in-transit completions on Russian-origin crude loaded on or before 17 April and running through 12:01 a.m. EDT on 17 June 1. This is the third consecutive 30-day bridge, and it reverses the read that Treasury had ruled out a successor after GL 134B lapsed on 16 May . The licence reinstates the full vessel-services umbrella, insurance, crewing, bunkering, piloting, classification and salvage, while paragraph (b)(1) holds the Cuba, Iran and DPRK carve-out in place 2.

The P&L moves straight off that paragraph. The cliff that priced as an exit-or-face-OFAC binary on 16 May is now an insurance-rate normalisation problem for KEBCO and Urals term holders. Cover runs through commercial vessel services, not a price-cap number, so it is the insurance and classification chain that reopens, not the discount math. Urals-Brent is stabilising on the news rather than rallying, because the variable that moved is P&I availability for pre-17-April cargoes.

Set that against the Druzhba southern leg , where MOL and Slovak refiners keep roughly 175-200kbd of exempt pipeline barrels at a feedstock advantage that has touched $40/bbl. Seaborne cargoes carry a freight-and-insurance compliance cost the pipeline crowd never pays, so 134C narrows the gap without closing it. The 17 June expiry now becomes the next binary: a fourth bridge, or the first hard cliff the freight desk has had to price.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The US government allows companies to temporarily move Russian oil even while Russia is under sanctions ; using a legal permit called a General Licence. When the previous permit (GL 134B) expired in May, there was confusion about whether a new one would be issued. On 18 May, a new one called GL 134C was signed, giving companies until 17 June to complete oil shipments that were already in progress. Think of it like an extension on a moving deadline: the rules are getting stricter over time, but companies get a window to finish what they started. Cuba was specifically excluded ; any shipment that passed through Cuba loses the protection entirely.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

GL 134C's existence reflects a structural trilemma: the US wants Russian oil revenue curtailed, but abrupt vessel-services withdrawal would simultaneously spike European energy costs (at current Brent above $96), expose allied refineries to supply disruption, and push marginal Russian barrels fully into shadow-fleet channels that Western sanctions cannot reach.

The 30-day rolling structure is a product of this trilemma. Each extension reduces the waiver window (loading cutoffs predate the waiver by 31 days) while maintaining the fiction of a wind-down ; the pre-17 April loading cutoff in GL 134C means the eligible cargo universe is already shrinking without Treasury having to announce a formal termination.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Without a GL 134D by 17 June, term holders of pre-17 April Urals and KEBCO cargoes face the same forced-exit or compliance-risk binary that GL 134B's expiry created on 16 May.

    Short term · Reported
  • Precedent

    The Adani $275m settlement on the same day as GL 134C establishes simultaneous carrot-and-stick enforcement as an explicit OFAC template for commodity sanctions.

    Medium term · Assessed
  • Risk

    Each successive loading cutoff (17 April for GL 134C) shrinks the eligible cargo universe; at some iteration the waiver covers so few barrels that terminal expiry becomes economically painless for Washington but logistically disruptive for NWE refiners.

    Medium term · Assessed
First Reported In

Update #2 · GL 134C reverses the cliff, Brent -$14

OFAC· 26 May 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
OFAC signs GL 134C, third Russia bridge
The 16 May exit-or-face-OFAC binary becomes an insurance and classification re-rating, not a forced unwind of Russian term positions.
Different Perspectives
Money managers
Money managers
Managed money rebuilt a dual crude net-long in the week to 9 June at entries $5-6 above the 12 June close; the 20 June print will show whether the flush ran. The RBOB long (+64,125 contracts) adds crack-compression exposure if crude overshoots lower before the product position unwinds.
OPEC+ / Saudi Arabia
OPEC+ / Saudi Arabia
OPEC's June MOMR cut 2026 demand growth to 970kbd for a third successive month; the 7 June ministerial added a third 188kbd July increment into a 37-year output low. Saudi Arabia's $108-111 fiscal breakeven sits above both the current Brent screen and the EIA's $79 2027 forecast, meaning Riyadh absorbs revenue pain to hold market share.
United States / OFAC
United States / OFAC
OFAC's 11 June issuance of GL 55F for Sakhalin-2 while declining to publish GL 134D signals a deliberate commodity-class split: gas licences for allied energy dependencies renewed; crude-vessel services allowed to run to lapse. Secretary Rubio's earlier statement (ID:4009) set the political intention; GL 55F confirms the architecture rather than contradicting it.
European Commission
European Commission
Brussels proposed the 21st package on 9 June to lock the $44.10 cap before the 15 July formula review auto-lifts it; Malta and Greece's block on the maritime-services ban risks delaying adoption past that deadline. A failed freeze converts the EU's primary revenue constraint on Russian oil into a decorative mechanism for H2 2026.
Russia
Russia
GL 134C's lapse on 17 June removes Western insurance cover from the fraction of Russian seaborne crude still routed through European P&I clubs, tightening placement at commercial terms. A 15 July cap review lifting the ceiling from $44.10 toward ~$75 would restore ~$93 million per day in export earnings at 3mbd, partly offsetting the vessel-services squeeze.
European Commission / EU energy regulators
European Commission / EU energy regulators
The EU 21st sanctions package, announced 26 May, targets shadow-fleet tankers and banks but has not accelerated a resolution of the ISAB ownership question. A 27 June GL 131F lapse without OFAC issuing a transaction licence creates a supply-security problem for Med products that Brussels cannot solve unilaterally.