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Posts Tagged ‘St. Petersburg International Economic Forum’

Putin says to investors: Trust me

June 16th, 2011 No comments

St. Petersburg

As the St. Petersburg Economic Forum gets underway, Prime Minister Putin is telling investors to trust him and put away their wariness of heightened risk because of corruption and weak rule of law in Russia. Russian authorities are pulling out all the stops to encourage much needed foreign investment. Deputy Economy Minister Stanislav Voskresensky, Putin’s director of foreign investors had this advice:

Do not scratch your head and wait: Russia is open for business and the potential profits are huge.”

Russia needs to offer high rewards for investing there as its attractiveness has faded despite recent strong commodity prices. Recently Chevron ended its partnership with Rosneft in the Shatsky Ridge deal in the Black Sea. Russian authorities loathe to cede any profits to multinationals, but the Shatsky deal was a concession to the fact that Russia cannot conduct offshore exploration without outside assistance.

Capital outflows have reached record heights from foreign and domestic capital. Over $55 billion has left Russia over the past eight months according to the International Monetary Fund.

Mikhail Khodorkovsky, former CEO of YUKOS estimates that due to graft in the economy, oil would have to be $200 a barrel before Russia can match the growth of the BRIC powerhouses China and India.

Economic reforms require 100 percent guarantees for private property and an effective, lawful state,” Khodorkovsky, 47, said in written answers to questions relayed through his lawyers. “Under the current political and economic model, to get a 10 percent growth rate for the Russian economy the oil price would have to remain solidly above $200 per barrel.

The World Justice Project released their 2011 Rule of Law Index and had this to say about Russia’s situation:

Russia shows serious deficiencies in checks and balances among the different branches of government (ranking 55th), leading to an institutional environment characterized by corruption, impunity, and political interference. Regulations are not always enforced (ranking 52nd), and civil courts, although accessible, are corrupt and inefficient. Crime rates in Russia are not as high as those in other middle- income countries (ranking 8th out of 19), and the criminal justice system is relatively effective (23rd). Violations against some fundamental rights, such as freedom of opinion, freedom of association, and arbitrary interference with privacy are areas of concern. [Read the full report here.]

With all these warning signs investors are right to be cautious about Russia. The market efficiency hypothesis in economics states that financial markets are “informationally efficient”. This hypothesis explains why Russia lags China and India in foreign investment and why until Russia makes comprehensive and visible changes to its legal and judicial systems, even the promise of excess market returns by the Prime Minister will not convince investors.

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(Russian) CREF Chairman’s Letter to St. Petersburg Economic Forum Attendees

June 16th, 2010 No comments

NEWS: Ex-YUKOS lawyer warns Russia forum guests

June 14th, 2010 No comments

The CREF letter sent to forum attendees has also made it into media.  Reuters and the Moscow Times recently posted the article below. The entire letter is in the previous post.

Ex-YUKOS lawyer warns Russia forum guests

* Previous YUKOS lawyer says Russia dangerous for business
* Sent e-mail to 1,000 Russian forum participants

By Jessica Bachman

MOSCOW, June 11 (Reuters) – A week before Russia rolls out its largest annual economic forum, an ex-lawyer for YUKOS who currently heads a nonprofit organization promoting transparency in business warned almost 1,000 foreign participants against going into the event with rose-colored glasses.

In a mass e-mail sent late on Thursday, Pavel Ivlev, who fled Russia in 2005 and now leads the Committee for Russian Economic Freedom, reminded participants including Citigroup (C.N) Chief Executive Officer Vikram Pandit and ConocoPhillips (COP.N) head James Mulva that Russia is an “extremely dangerous” place to do business.

“As you listen to Russian officials and businessmen discuss potential gold mines in investing in Russia, be mindful that there are numerous land mines as well,” reads the final line of his e-mail.

Several European leaders, including French President Nicolas Sarkozy, are expected to attend the international economic forum, which opens in Russia’s second city of Saint Petersburg on June 17.

The three-day event is Russia’s answer to Davos in Switzerland, where foreign corporate and political leaders come to clinch billions of dollars worth of contracts and hobnob with the creme de la creme of Russia’s political and business elite.

Ivlev, a former lawyer for oil firm YUKOS, told Reuters on Friday his e-mail was a “call to action.”

“I am not suggesting a boycott of the forum; rather I am calling on the business community to stop being quiet and start speaking out about the lack of transparency and rule in law in Russia,” he said by telephone from the United States.

Ivlev worked for an independent law firm in Moscow that represented YUKOS, the former oil giant dissolved by the Kremlin and bankrupted in 2007.

Charges were brought against Ivlev in 2005 for theft, money laundering and helping YUKOS in tax evasion schemes, two years after his client, the company’s former CEO Mikhail Khodorkovsky, was arrested and jailed.

Khodorkovsky, in prison in eastern Siberia, is now facing a second round of trials, also on charges of theft and money laundering. (Reporting by Jessica Bachman)

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CREF Chairman’s Open Letter to St. Petersburg International Economic Forum Attendees

June 11th, 2010 No comments

The 2010 St. Petersburg International Economic Forum will start next week on June 17. This is a key capital markets event for investors, business people and policymakers and supported by the Russian Federation. Talk about the economy and banking is everywhere. This neatly dovetails into Russia’s own focus on economics as the main engagement point with other countries, especially those in the G20. Below is a letter from CREF’s Chairman Pavel Ivlev to forum attendees.

CREF Chairman’s Letter to St. Petersburg Economic Forum Attendees

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