Russia's reported decision to halt flows of Kazakh crude via the Druzhba pipeline from May 1 would tighten supplies to Central and Eastern Europe and raise near‑term pressure on Urals/European feedstocks. Expect an upside shock to Brent/Urals differentials, a rotation into upstream oil names and tankers (as some volumes shift to seaborne routes), and downside pressure on European refiners, energy‑intensive sectors and travel/airlines. Near term this is inflationary (adds to already elevated Brent), increasing stagflation and “higher‑for‑longer” Fed concerns — a negative for richly valued broad equities but a positive for oil producers, oilfield services and shipping. Specific implications: upstream integrated majors and listed producers (Exxon, Chevron, Shell, BP, TotalEnergies, Eni, KazMunayGas, Lukoil) should see positive revenue/realization bias; refiners with exposure to Druzhba flows (PKN Orlen, MOL, smaller Eastern European refiners) face margin squeeze or need to source alternative crude; tanker owners (Frontline, Euronav) could benefit from rerouted seaborne volumes; oilfield services (Schlumberger, Baker Hughes) may see modest benefit if higher spending/price leads to longer‑term capex re‑phasing. FX and rates: euro could weaken on a Europe‑specific energy shock (EUR/USD), NOK tends to strengthen on higher oil (USD/NOK moves), and RUB may be volatile but often tracks oil positively (USD/RUB). Market watch: duration of the cut, Russian/Kazakh diplomatic/operational response, rerouting capacity via Black Sea/sea shipments, and European strategic reserves will determine whether this is a short squeeze or a longer disruption.