Russian Security Service said to stall Schlumberger deal
Russia’s Federal Security Service, the main successor to the KGB, is holding up Schlumberger Ltd.’s acquisition of a 46 percent stake in Eurasia Drilling Co., according to two people with knowledge of the matter. The FSB, as the service is known, is concerned that Schlumberger would have too much influence in Russia’s oil- services market, according to the people, who asked not to be identified because the talks are private. Schlumberger, based in Houston and Paris, offered to buy the Eurasia stake for $1.7 billion in January, with an option to acquire the rest of the country’s largest oil-services company. “It is very much a political rather than a practical thing that can be addressed by Schlumberger and ourselves,” Eurasia Vice President Tom O’Gallagher said on a conference call Aug. 20. “We don’t know what the concerns are.” Eurasia Drilling’s global depositary receipts dropped 13 percent to $10.47 on the London Stock Exchange by 9:23 a.m., the lowest intraday price since December. The acquisition would give a Western company increasing influence in Russia’s most important industry as relations with the U.S. and European Union suffer because of the conflict in Ukraine. Both have already banned exports of some drilling technology to Russia.