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Russia outlines plan for 'unfriendly' investors to sell up at half-price

Published 12/30/2022, 11:59 AM
Updated 12/30/2022, 01:36 PM
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A sign is on display outside Russia's Finance Ministry building in Moscow, Russia March 30, 2021. A sign reads: "Ministry of Finance of the Russian Federation". REUTERS/Maxim Shemetov/File Photo

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Foreign investors from "unfriendly" countries selling stakes in Russian assets may have to do so at half-price or less, the finance ministry said on Friday, with the Russian budget potentially taking a 10% cut of any transaction.

Since Moscow sent its army into Ukraine in February, many Western companies - from energy producers to food and clothing chains - have left Russia.

Minutes from a meeting of a government commission monitoring foreign investment listed a set of measures that could apply to "foreign persons associated with foreign states that commit unfriendly acts against Russian legal entities and individuals" when selling assets.

The term "unfriendly" describes countries that have imposed sanctions on Russia in response to its military intervention, including members of the European Union, the United States, Japan, Canada, Britain and Australia.

It was not immediately clear how the government would choose to implement the measures and whether they would apply to every deal.

Transactions may require an independent assessment of the value of the assets, with key performance indicators established for the new shareholders, according to minutes of the Dec. 22 meeting published on Friday by the finance ministry.

One condition stated: "The sale of assets at a discount of at least 50% of the market value of the relevant assets indicated in the asset valuation report."

Another said sellers could be required to commit to one to two years of additional payments or an upfront charge of 10% of the overall transaction to Russia's federal budget.

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A bill that would have enabled authorities to seize Western assets did not make it through parliament this summer.

But a decree signed by President Vladimir Putin on Aug. 5 banned investors from unfriendly countries from selling shares in the most significant and transferable investments - key energy projects and banks - unless Putin issued a waiver.

Latest comments

when escaping evil Putin's regime, half is great, they would be happy to escape alive! however we are learning a lesson investing in communist countries! except for stinky Muskie!
It seems private property is now history in Russia. Putin owns it all and will take whatever he wants. Poor companies that invested in Russia their money are now all lost…..Putin will have no respect for others private property only his own personal property stolen from the russian people
Russia returning to its commie roots
During the war, all options are good.
What did you expect? You placed all kinds of restrictions on them and expect them play nice?
Restrictions like not invading your neighbors and no war crimes.
oh so the invasion of a country and killing its citizens is in your opinion nice... sick puppy
You must be a Trumptard.
Commie & fascist Russia is nationalizing/stealing foreigners' assets after stealing Ukrainian lands, grains & washing machines.
where did you get this crap from . You're a deluded individual if you think so .
  Russia had a contractual obligation to ship gas to Germany.  It didn't before the sabotage, and by blowing the pipelines up, Russia can declare  force majeure and weasel out of financial penalties, and the pipelines were insured by UK & German companies.
  It's often the retrumplicans speaking/lying for Putin/Kremlin.
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