MVM could take a loan to buy the MOL stake, which is worth around 500 billion forints ($2.6 billion), without boosting Hungary's public debt. Hungary's public debt is already the biggest in central and Eastern Europe. The Hungarian National Development Ministry said last Thursday that buying Surgut's stake would be "one possible solution for the current, uncertain situation." The sale of the Russian stake to MVM would create a more stable situation, reassuring Hungary that MOL isn't an acquisition target
MVM could take a loan to buy the MOL stake, which is worth around 500 billion forints ($2.6 billion), without boosting Hungary's public debt. Hungary's public debt is already the biggest in central and Eastern Europe.

The Hungarian National Development Ministry said last Thursday that buying Surgut's stake would be "one possible solution for the current, uncertain situation." The sale of the Russian stake to MVM would create a more stable situation, reassuring Hungary that MOL isn't an acquisition target.

The ministry also said it intends to address wider energy sector issues in its negotiations with Russian counterparts, and the purchase price for the MOL stake could be lower than HUF500 billion, Nepszabadsag added.

Sources close to MVM told the daily that acquiring a stake in MOL wouldn't be unusual as Czech partly state-owned power firm CEZ already has a stake in MOL.

Financing the MOL purchase and its share of the estimated EUR1 billion Azerbaijan-Georgia-Romania Interconnector, or AGRI, project would hurt MVM's plans to expand the country's only nuclear plant Paksi Atomeromu Zrt., sources close to MVM told the daily.