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WSJ: Excerpts: Gunvor'S Timchenko

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  • WSJ: Excerpts: Gunvor'S Timchenko

    EXCERPTS: GUNVOR'S TIMCHENKO

    Wall Street Journal
    June 11 2008

    On His History, Putin and Gunvor

    Gennady Timchenko, the world's most powerful independent trader of
    Russian oil, spoke with The Wall Street Journal's Guy Chazan about
    his past, his politics and his company, Gunvor Group. (See related
    article.)

    On his history

    "I was born in Armenia, in the city of Leninakan. My father was in the
    military. He was transferred from place to place because of military
    service. When I was 6 we moved to East Germany. I spent there another
    six to seven years. Then we moved to Ukraine. In 1970 I started
    studying at the Mechanical Institute (in Leningrad). I finished in
    1977. I studied to be an electro-mechanical engineer. After that,
    I got a job at the Izhorsk plant, near St. Petersburg. It was a big
    factory, with 20,000 workers. I was responsible for making equipment
    for nuclear power stations -- power generators.

    "In 1987, Russia decided to change from a monopoly of foreign trade to
    give some enterprises the right also to do foreign trade with foreign
    countries. Nikolai Ryzhkov (the then-Soviet prime minister) signed
    the decree. If you wanted to do foreign trade at the refinery, you
    needed educated people. This refinery (Kirishi) got an order. Seventy
    to seventy-two enterprises in Russia got the right to trade. What
    happened -- the management of Kirishi refinery -- because it's not far
    from St. Petersburg -- came to St. Petersburg to look for potential
    staff for this (foreign trade) organization -- because they were
    supposed to trade petrochemicals, oil etc. They came to one of my
    friends, who had a background at the Academy of Foreign Trade. He
    was working for a foreign trade organization in Soviet times, in the
    energy sector. They invited him as a vice director of their foreign
    trade company. He said OK. He called me, and said if you want you can
    join us. It was my luck. My luck started there. I got to the right
    industry -- a very interesting industry."

    On his ties to the KGB

    "I never worked in the organs. It's a fairy tale, a conspiracy story. I
    was never in East Germany at the same time when they say I served
    with Putin. I know all this. It's a mess what they publish. And it's
    so easy to check.

    "I am a businessman, really. I came up from the factory, and then
    the Kirishi refinery in 1987."

    On his relationship with Putin

    "I first got to know him (in) the early 1990s, when we were already
    in the oil business. We thought that it was time to reconstruct
    the terminal in St. Petersburg. To do that you need to go through
    certain procedures with the Mayor's office. I went there when
    (Anatoly) Sobchak was leader. Putin was his assistant. We met --
    I was a member of the delegation. It was after he returned from his
    service in Germany -- say 1991-92. We tried to get this project done
    but it never happened. This was the first time we met.

    "That time, the Russian system worked this way. You had to have
    licenses to sell crude oil, refined products, petrochemicals. It was
    big trouble with cash at that time in the country. It was hard to
    borrow money, so the ministry in Moscow gave quotas to the refinery to
    sell certain amounts of oil. It could even be the mayor's office. That
    was the way the state supported the regions. And that's why we had
    contacts with the mayor's office. We were the only professional company
    in St. Petersburg who got the right to become a "special exporter." We
    were qualified. After that the St. Petersburg mayor's office asked
    us to fulfill some of the quotas they had, such as kerosene to sell,
    or heavy fuel. We were supposed to sell it and we would bring them
    money or food. Barter deals. They needed food urgently. I remember
    when Sobchak said, "Guys, we have food for only two days, please do
    something quickly." We sold heavy fuel to Iceland, and we immediately
    bought from them herring because it's easy to transport. It was at
    least something. That's how it was. Those were the contacts we had
    with that office."

    On his friendliness with Putin

    "It's not true. I knew Putin. I knew him through this judo club. When
    I went there to fights and he's there, we would shake hands. I don't
    have time to meet with him. He doesn't have time to meet with me,
    probably. Last time I met him was about two years go. We met with
    judo champions, girls and boys. Many people were there -- 30 to 40
    people. It wasn't a fight -- it was just a meeting of the champions."

    On the growth of Gunvor

    "We had an opinion with Torbjorn (Tornqvist) that oil prices are going
    up. We had an opinion that Russian oil production is going to grow a
    lot. So why don't we create something global, something that will work
    on a higher scale? He was in this industry for many years. He started
    in BP. And I had certain experience also. There was good chemistry. We
    got on well together. He created a very good team of traders. Really
    top traders, top of the market. This is one reason. The second reason
    is always that we already had certain business for many years in
    Russia -- him and me. He did his business, I did mine. But when we
    joined forces, it was synergy. Last year, we did a $40 billion turnover
    ... Next year, probably $70 billion turnover. That's the prediction.

    "We have relations with our competitors, with Vitol. I know people
    personally there. I talked to one of the owners of the company. He said
    I take my hat off to you. You did it very fast. You did a good job.

    "My feeling is that it's because we took steps to go into logistics,
    and we're doing it really well. And investing in logistics. That's a
    serious reason. Second reason -- we created offices -- maybe worldwide
    is an exaggeration, but in Nigeria, Singapore, Amsterdam. It means
    we're starting to buy oil from other countries.

    "Why so fast? It depends what you mean by fast. I consider it quite
    reasonable, from my point of view. If you look at the Russian market,
    all our volumes we get on the tenders. If it is Rosneft, or a private
    oil company. A gentleman was here, a senior manager from TNK-BP. I
    talked to him the other day. We met for the first time. He said we
    have five companies who buy oil from us and Gunvor has the biggest
    share of all these 5. Not because of some kind of advantage. It's
    just pure economics, pure business. We can give better conditions. We
    have certain know-how in our system, how we give the best price to
    them. You take Rosneft. (We have) 30% to 40% of their volumes. But
    everything is in open tenders.

    "It's pure economics in our relationship with Gazprom Neft,
    Surgutneftegaz, and TNK-BP. We have a big gasoline business, because
    we took really good traders. They're doing a very good job and they're
    very well-paid. It's market conditions."

    http://online.wsj.com/article/S B121313303128762055.html?mod=googlenews_wsj
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