Iran Said to Seek Yen Payments From India for Oil Amid Sanctions
       By Pratish Narayanan and Anto Antony      
Jan. 23 (Bloomberg) -- Iran has asked India to pay for oil  partly in yen as the two nations seek an agreement on how to maintain  trade amid tightening global sanctions, according to three people with  knowledge of the matter.     At talks in Tehran last week, India proposed to  pay its second-biggest oil supplier in rupees through a bank account in  the South Asian nation, said the people, declining to be identified  because the information is confidential. Iranian officials sought  partial payment in yen because they’re concerned that they may not get  sufficient value from the rupee, which isn’t fully convertible,  according to the people.
     The nations have struggled to preserve $9.5  billion in annual crude trade after the Reserve Bank of India dismantled  a mechanism used to settle payments in euros and dollars in December  2010. Transactions are currently routed through Turkiye Halk Bankasi AS,  based in Ankara, which has told Indian refiners it may no longer be  able to be an intermediary, four people with knowledge of the matter  said Jan. 10.
     European Union foreign ministers meet in Brussels  today to consider an oil embargo and additional financial sanctions on  the country for its nuclear program. Iran is already under four rounds  of UN Security Council sanctions. The U.S. and its allies say they  suspect its nuclear program is a cover for developing atomic weapons, a  charge Iran has repeatedly denied, maintaining it’s for civilian  purposes.
     The Indian rupee has fallen 9.7 percent in the  past 12 months, the most among major Asian currencies, according to data  compiled by Bloomberg. Japan’s yen has strengthened 6.5 percent in the  period, making it the best-performing currency in the region, according  to data compiled by Bloomberg.
                           Yen Options
     India is exploring how it could pay Iran in yen, although a plan hasn’t been decided, the people said.
     The Persian Gulf nation is studying the option of  opening an account in an Indian bank, which can be used by refiners to  deposit payments in rupees and fund its own imports from the South Asian  country, they said.
     India’s central bank needs to give its approval  for Iran to open a local account, the people said. The Reserve Bank of  India is considering options to solve the payments issue over Iranian  oil, Deputy Governor K.C. Chakrabarty said on Jan. 20.
     The Gulf nation is concerned that India’s entire  crude oil bill can’t be paid through exports to Iran, the people said.  Iran’s imports from India are worth about $2.5 billion a year, while its  annual oil sales to the South Asian nation are valued at about $9.5  billion, the people said.
     Iran also wants India to invest in non-strategic infrastructure projects in return for crude supplies, the people said.
                          Currency Swap
     Last month, Japan agreed to make $15 billion  available to India in a currency swap arrangement as Europe’s deepening  debt crisis threatened to curtail developing Asia’s access to dollar  funding. Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda renewed a bilateral swap  agreement with Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in New Delhi on  Dec. 28. The two nations had signed a $3 billion accord in June 2008  that had expired.
     Singh discussed alternative financial conduits  with Russian officials during his visit to Moscow in December. India,  which got 11 percent of its crude imports from Iran last year, is  exploring the option of making payments for Iranian crude through  Russia’s Gazprombank OJSC, though no deal has been reached, three of the  people said Jan. 9.
                         Rising Tension
     Tensions with Iran have risen, with Vice  President Reza Rahimi warning on Dec. 27 that Iran, the second-biggest  producer in the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, after  Saudi Arabia, may close the Strait of Hormuz if western nations block  its crude oil sales.
     A potential decision by the EU to freeze Iran’s  central bank assets and impose a ban on Iranian oil imports requires  unanimous backing among the bloc’s 27 nations. The embargo would hurt  Greece, Italy and Spain, which depend on Iranian supplies and would need  to find alternative sources.
     U.S. President Barack Obama on Dec. 31 signed  into law measures that deny access to the U.S. financial system to any  foreign bank that conducts business with the central bank of Iran. The  law includes language that allows the president to waive the sanctions  if he determines they would threaten national security.
     India opposes sanctions on Iran from anyone other  than the United Nations, Ranjan Mathai, India’s foreign secretary, said  Jan. 17. India continues to buy Iranian oil, he said.

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