On February 2, 2026, President Trump picked up the phone. On the other end: Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi. |
Hours later, the world heard Trump declare victory: "India will stop buying Russian oil. They'll buy ours. And Venezuela's. A huge win." |
But was it? |
Modi publicly thanked the President for slashing tariffs. |
But when it came to confirming the oil pivot? Radio silence. No decree. No orders to refiners. Just one thunderous question now echoing across global energy markets: |
Can India afford to walk away from $11 billion worth of discounted Russian oil? |
What’s at stake isn’t diplomacy. |
It’s a head-on collision between global politics and the cold, immovable physics of oil. |
The Real Cost of Alignment |
Since the war in Ukraine began, Russia has sold oil at a steep discount, sometimes $15 or $20 per barrel below global prices. |
India didn’t just take advantage of that. It built an energy strategy around it. |
Today, roughly 30% of India's crude imports come from Russia. Those cheap barrels have helped keep inflation under control and profits high. |
Now, President Trump wants India to take a stand against Moscow. |
The carrot is lower tariffs on Indian exports. |
The stick comes in the form of threats, secondary sanctions for Indian companies that keep trading with Russian suppliers. |
Here’s the problem. You can’t swap one barrel for another like you’re playing a game of Tetris. |
Russian crude is medium-grade. U.S. oil is light and sweet. Venezuela’s is so heavy that it clogs equipment without help. |
Most Indian refineries are built specifically to handle what Russia offers. |
Changing that setup is expensive, time-consuming, and full of risk. |
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What Happens If India Says Yes? |
If Modi agrees to cut off Russian crude, the ripple effects won’t wait. |
India’s oil import costs could surge by $9 to $11 billion a year Inflation could come roaring back Refiners may be forced into shutdowns or costly overhauls
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The gains from the tariff deal would be wiped out by the spike in energy prices. |
And there would be political fallout, too. |
Modi’s opponents are already calling the deal a betrayal. |
If fuel prices rise, it could ignite unrest at home. India votes in 2026. |
The timing couldn't be worse. |
What Happens If India Says No? |
Russia will find another buyer. Most likely, China. |
India would lose its tariff break. President Trump would still claim victory. |
But the global oil market wouldn’t flinch. Russia would keep selling. India would keep growing. Life would go on. |
Here’s what matters most: |
Sanctions may aim to block oil, but oil finds a way. |
Iran did. Venezuela did. Russia is doing it now. Tankers switch flags. GPS signals go dark. Crude slips through the cracks. |
If India steps back, Russian oil doesn’t disappear. It just sails in a different direction. |
Here’s What You Do Now |
This isn’t a story to bookmark for later. It’s unfolding in real time. |
If India follows through and reduces Russian crude imports, oil markets could tighten quickly. |
That would mean: |
A potential spike in energy prices Pressure on emerging market currencies like the rupee Squeezed margins for refiners caught in the middle
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Here’s how to prepare: |
Look at long positions in oil-focused ETFs or high-quality producers Pull back exposure to Indian sectors that rely on cheap fuel Keep an eye on import-export data. If Russian volumes drop, move fast
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The policy shift might never materialize. But if it does, the impact will be swift. |
Trump made the declaration. Modi played the diplomatic game. But the ships keep moving. |
That silence tells you everything. |
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The Market Doesn’t Care About Press Conferences |
This entire drama has played out in front of cameras, but the real action is still unfolding beneath the surface. |
President Trump made the declaration. Modi played the diplomatic game. |
But the ships are still moving, and the contracts are still active. Refiners haven’t changed their orders. And Indian ports haven’t stopped accepting Russian barrels. |
The silence behind the headlines is louder than the words in them. |
The market understands something that politicians often forget: |
Politics can stir the pot. But price still controls the flow. |
The traders know it. The refiners know it. And the smartest investors are already positioning for it. |
Those who hesitate? |
They’ll be the ones left holding the bag. |
Stay Sharp, |
Gideon Ashwood |
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