U.S. sanctions hit Russian hopes of a
'Trump bump' for investment
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[August 15, 2017]
By Christian Lowe
MOSCOW (Reuters) - New U.S. sanctions on
Moscow have forced Russian business chiefs to accept that Donald Trump's
rise to power is not about to produce a "Trump Bump" in foreign
investment.
After Trump became U.S. president, some investors said they would be
prepared to contemplate new deals with Russian firms if they saw signs
that U.S.-Russian ties were improving and U.S. restrictions on business
with Russia were being relaxed.
But the new sanctions, signed onto law by Trump on Aug. 2, add new
measures and codify six orders signed by President Barack Obama, making
them harder for Trump to revoke.
For the business community in Moscow, the message is clear -- there is
no immediate prospect of Washington softening its stance towards Moscow.
"Russia faces the codification of sanctions which suggests they will be
hellishly difficult to take off and are likely to remain in place for
the very long term," said Tim Ash, a strategist at BlueBay asset
management in London.
"The mere fact that the U.S. and Western governments ... saw fit to levy
sanctions on Russia sends at the least an amber light to Western
business –- be careful in your dealings with Russia."
The United States initially imposed financial and travel restrictions on
Russia in 2014, after Russia annexed the Crimea region from Ukraine
following the fall of a pro-Moscow president in Kiev.
The latest measures allow Congress to block any effort by the president
to ease or lift the existing sanctions, tightens some of those
sanctions, and imposes new restrictions in some sectors.
Executives in Russian banks and energy companies, the main targets of
the U.S. sanctions, told Reuters their compliance departments were still
going through the fine print of the new law to understand the practical
impact.
Already clear, though, was the message about the duration of the
sanctions.
"This is obviously for a long time," said a source in a major Russian
oil company, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he is not
authorized to speak to the media.
Moody's rating agency said in a note to clients that the new sanctions
on Russia "are likely to further deter investment there."
The sanctions in place since 2014 directly restrict a narrow range of
business dealings. Their biggest effect, according to investment bankers
and corporate lawyers in Moscow, is that they create the risk of more
sanctions being added.
Under that scenario, a deal signed outside the scope of the sanctions
could quickly fall under sanctions. If that happened, investors would be
likely to lose money and few want to take that risk.
On the other hand, if investors believe the sanctions will not be
expanded, they can conclude deals with some confidence, even while
existing measures remain in place.
SHIP HASN'T SAILED
Trump's election triumph last November led many in the Russian business
community to believe that the worst of the sanctions was over.
It was at this time that a long-planned deal to privatize a stake in
Sovcomflot, a state-owned shipping company with a fleet of modern
vessels and lucrative energy sector contracts, was put back on the
government's agenda.
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President Donald Trump meets with Russian President Vladimir Putin
during their bilateral meeting at the G20 summit in Hamburg, Germany
July 7, 2017. REUTERS/Carlos Barria/File Photo
The fate of the partial privatization since then reflects the
importance of the new sanctions to investor sentiment.
No one involved in the Sovcomflot deal has publicly committed to a
date for the sale but two financial market sources told Reuters late
in May that the deal was expected in early June.
The plan later changed again because of deteriorating market
conditions, a source familiar with the situation said in June -- the
same week that the Russian stock index slipped on concerns that
Washington would impose new sanctions on Moscow.
Later in June, a senior Russian government official told Reuters the
deal might happen in July. But after the new U.S. sanctions,
Moscow's tone on the deal became more cautious though officials
declined to say whether the new sanctions would alter the
government's decision about when the sale happens.
"It's clear that the USA's toughening of the sanctions regime right
now will hardly make the investment climate for this asset more
attractive on international financial markets," Transport Minister
Maxim Sokolov told reporters on Aug. 3.
Anton Tabakh, a Russian economist, said the main problem the new
sanctions posed for Russian investment was that they increase
uncertainty about what happens next.
The new measures "guarantee that the risk of the sanctions expanding
will remain for a long time," he wrote in a commentary for Carnegie
Moscow Center, a think tank.
The new sanctions are unlikely to trigger an immediate crisis in
Russia. Business and government have adapted to living with low
investment flows, and the central bank has the tools to maintain
macro-economic stability.
Longer-term, tepid foreign investment is likely to shave a few
percentage points off economic growth, economists say. The Russian
economy contracted in 2015 and 2016, and is seen growing up to 1.8
percent this year, according to Russia's central bank.
That is far below the average annual growth of nearly 7 percent on
which President Vladimir Putin built high approval ratings early in
his presidency.
Explaining this will be one of his challenges when, as most Russians
expect, he asks Russian voters to re-elect him in next year's
presidential election.
(Additional reporting by Polina Nikolskaya; Andrey Ostroukh, Oksana
Kobzeva, Olesya Astakhova, Gleb Grodoyankin, Denis Pinchuk and Katya
Golubkova; Writing by Christian Lowe, Editing by Timothy Heritage)
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