joining us now is nadia martin wiggen, chief oil analyst at pareto securities, the price cap is 60 dollarsguest said keeping the oil flowing does not put a dent in putin's pocket. nadia: it does not change anything. we have always expected russian oil to flow out because it is a tight market. these are sanctions, not a global embargo like the iran situation. it shows that the eu and u.s. are not going to go after those who buy oil from russia. it will probably result in a discount because you don't get the insurance out of the u.k. and europe that we are used to. so china, india and other buyers will have to make up for that weakness. dani: is the infrastructure from russia, the fleet of tankers to keep the same amount of oil flowing, but diverting it to india and china? nadia: yes, but it is not only russia's fleet, it is this general shadow market fleet. it is always murky, but especially now in terms of sales, we don't know who is buying these ships. the exciting point as manus pointed out, is in february, with a clean tanker market because that is much smaller. the difference in close