Newsletter Newsletters Events Events Podcasts Videos Africanews
Loader
Advertisement

Swiss firm Gunvor drops plan to buy Lukoil assets after US resistance

A person walks near the building of the Lukoil headquarters in Sofia, Bulgaria. 28 Oct. 2025.
A person walks near the building of the Lukoil headquarters in Sofia, Bulgaria. 28 Oct. 2025. Copyright  AP/Valentina Petrova
Copyright AP/Valentina Petrova
By AP with Eleanor Butler
Published on
Share Comments
Share Close Button

“As long as Putin continues the senseless killings, the Kremlin’s puppet, Gunvor, will never get a licence to operate and profit,” said the US Treasury in an X post on Thursday.

A top-tier international commodities trader has dropped plans to buy the international assets of Russia oil company Lukoil as it rejected US government allegations of being “the Kremlin's puppet".

Trading firm Gunvor, whose main trading office is in Geneva, announced on X that it is withdrawing its proposal to acquire the Lukoil assets, a deal that the Russian company announced last week.

Lukoil said it agreed to the deal, pending some conditions — including permission from the US Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control, or OFAC. Terms of the deal were not specified.

On the same social media platform late on Thursday, the Treasury Department alluded to Russian President Vladimir Putin's decision to send Russian troops to invade Ukraine in February 2022 and US President Donald Trump's efforts to end the war, which has killed and injured hundreds of thousands of people.

“President Trump has been clear that the war must end immediately,” the department's post on X said. “As long as Putin continues the senseless killings, the Kremlin’s puppet, Gunvor, will never get a licence to operate and profit.”

Gunvor, in its post shortly afterward, said Treasury's statement about it was “fundamentally misinformed and false”.

“Gunvor is and has always been open and transparent about its ownership and business, and has for more than a decade actively distanced itself from Russia, stopped trading in line with sanctions, sold off Russian assets, and publicly condemned the war in Ukraine,” the post said.

“We welcome the opportunity to ensure this clear misunderstanding is corrected. In the meantime, Gunvor withdraws its proposal for Lukoil’s international assets,” it added.

Gunvor was founded by Swedish oil magnate Torbjörn Törnqvist, its chairman, and Gennady Timchenko, an oligarch close to Putin. Its headquarters are in Nicosia, Cyprus.

The company says Timchenko is no longer affiliated with Gunvor and his shares, in anticipation of “potential economic sanctions”, were sold to Törnqvist in March 2014 — as Russia moved to annex the Crimean Peninsula from Ukraine.

Lukoil had said it was selling its international assets in response to US sanctions, which aim to push Russia to agree to a ceasefire in its war against Ukraine.

The company has stakes in oil and gas projects in 11 countries, refineries in Bulgaria and Romania, and a 45% stake in a refinery in the Netherlands, as well as gas stations in many countries.

Go to accessibility shortcuts
Share Comments

Read more