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		Questions linger over Deripaska's Rusal 
		influence after U.S. deal 
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		 [February 04, 2019] 
		By Polina Devitt and Arshad Mohammed 
 MOSCOW/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. 
		Treasury believes it can curb the influence of Oleg Deripaska over 
		aluminum giant Rusal despite concerns the Russian oligarch may still be 
		able to pull the strings of his business empire from behind the scenes.
 
 Rusal and its parent company En+ were hit with U.S. sanctions in April 
		when Washington blacklisted billionaire Deripaska along with several 
		other influential Russians because of their ties to Russian President 
		Vladimir Putin.
 
 After months of negotiations, Deripaska agreed in late 2018 to reduce 
		his stake in En+ to 44.95 percent from 70 percent in a deal with the 
		U.S. Treasury Department that allowed the punitive measures against 
		Rusal and En+ to be lifted.
 
 While the announcement was a relief to major companies that depend on 
		aluminum, U.S. congressional Democrats demanded further legislation to 
		ensure that Deripaska abides by the deal "in letter and in spirit".
 
 They believe U.S. President Donald Trump let Deripaska off the hook 
		following intense lobbying by some European companies and governments 
		worried about the impact of high aluminum prices and the fate of workers 
		at Rusal's operations in Europe.
 
		
		 
		
 While the voting rights in En+ under Deripaska's control are now capped 
		at 35 percent, votes controlled by potential allies could boost that 
		percentage above 50 and allow the Russian tycoon to influence strategic 
		decisions.
 
 Under the new structure, Deripaska's long-term partner Glencore, a 
		Swiss-based commodities trading company, gets 10.55 percent of the votes 
		while Kremlin-controlled bank VTB holds onto 7.35 percent, according to 
		the voting structure published by En+.
 
 As part of the deal, four U.S.-nominated independent trustees now 
		control the voting rights for another 37.7 percent of En+ shares held by 
		Deripaska, former family members, his charitable foundation, VTB and 
		some other shareholders.
 
 The remaining votes in En+, which will have a 56.9 percent stake in 
		Rusal once the ownership restructuring is complete, are controlled by 
		institutional and retail investors.
 
 GRAPHIC - En+ shareholder structure : https://tmsnrt.rs/2BcbOIZ
 
 STRETCHED THIN
 
 The deal contains multiple measures, including the threat of sanctions, 
		to prevent a scenario in which Deripaska could exercise control over the 
		companies at board level by acting in concert with other shareholders.
 
 But many of those measures operate on the basis of self-reporting: the 
		companies must inform the U.S. Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets 
		Control (OFAC) of any attempt by Deripaska and other shareholders to 
		form a coalition.
 
 Elizabeth Rosenberg, a former U.S. Treasury official at the Center for a 
		New American Security think-tank, said OFAC, which administers U.S. 
		sanctions regimes against Iran, Venezuela and elsewhere, may not have 
		the resources to track Deripaska's role.
 
 "I am worried that, in fact, the task may be beyond them and that in 
		fact they are stretched extremely thin, with an array of other 
		priorities ... and that they won't have the bandwidth to follow up 
		adequately," Rosenberg said.
 
 A U.S. Treasury Department spokesman who spoke on condition of anonymity 
		said the deal was robust enough to sever Deripaska's control over Rusal, 
		En+ and power company ESE - as well as block any attempts to circumvent 
		the rules.
 
		
		 
		"Those who transact business for or on his behalf run the risk of being 
		sanctioned themselves, including VTB Bank or Glencore should they choose 
		to work on Deripaska's behalf," said the spokesman.
 
 Deripaska's representative, VTB and Glencore declined to comment.
 
 While the threat of new sanctions is potentially serious for 
		international companies, one European diplomat, who declined to be 
		named, said the risk of being hit by OFAC penalties may have little 
		impact on Russians with limited ties to the West.
 
 "If you are a Russian, living in Russia ... why would you care?" the 
		diplomat
 
 SANCTIONS THREAT
 
 Deripaska, who created his empire after coming out on top in the brutal 
		Russian aluminum wars of the 1990s, is known in the Russian business 
		world as a fighter who never gives up - regardless of the domestic or 
		global balance of power.
 
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			Russian aluminium tycoon Oleg Deripaska waits before the talks of 
			Russian President Vladimir Putin with South Korean President Moon 
			Jae-in at the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia June 22, 2018. 
			REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin 
            
 
		He has spent the past two decades carefully building his chain of 
		assets, hand-picking management teams going back to when he took control 
		of his first Siberian smelters. And until he agreed to cut his stake in 
		En+ under the U.S. deal, he had never sold a major asset in his life. 
            The U.S. Treasury spokesman said Deripaska had contractually 
			committed not to try to exercise control over En+ or companies it 
			owns or controls, including their boards or management.
 The deal also requires En+ and its companies to maintain records of 
			any contacts between Deripaska and the boards, management, 
			employees, or agents of En+, the spokesman said, adding that 
			managers who engage in any contacts that are inappropriate under the 
			agreement must be removed.
 
 Asked what mechanism OFAC would use to police compliance and how 
			much capacity it had for independent checks, the spokesman said 
			information provided by En+ and its companies would supplement and 
			be confirmed by a team of U.S. investigators.
 
 "This team will review all submissions to OFAC from En+, Rusal and 
			ESE, in addition to using other resources to monitor the actions of 
			Deripaska, the companies, and their board members, to ensure that 
			Deripaska is not able to exercise unofficial control over En+, Rusal, 
			or ESE," the spokesman said.
 
 He said any attempt by a coalition of shareholders to change the 
			composition of a company's board would be uncovered by OFAC and 
			result in the reimposition of sanctions on En+, its subsidiaries and 
			any other parties involved.
 
 En+ chairman Greg Barker, a former British government minister, said 
			the board would go beyond the requirements set out by OFAC by 
			establishing a compliance committee and would retain independent 
			counsel to advise on governance.
 
 QUESTION OF CONTROL?
 
 Some U.S. Democrats remain concerned, however, that despite the 
			various checks and balances, Deripaska may still be able to wield 
			influence.
 
 Senator Mark Warner, the top Democrat on the Senate Intelligence 
			Committee and among the most vocal critics of the deal, said there 
			were potential conflicts of interest in the new governance 
			structure.
 
 One of the trustees appointed by OFAC to exercise voting rights in 
			En+ to ensure Deripaska cannot influence the board is a law firm 
			based in Jersey that has worked for him and his companies for years.
 
             
            
 "My concern all along was that Deripaska would, directly or 
			indirectly, still retain control over his companies and benefit 
			personally from this deal," Warner said in response to a Reuters 
			question about the law firm's role as trustee.
 
 Two former U.S. sanctions officials said the deal did sever 
			Deripaska's control. But whether he exercises de facto influence is 
			beyond OFAC's scope, said Michael Dobson, a former U.S. Treasury 
			official now at the Morrison & Foerster law firm.
 
 Analysts said Deripaska may continue to influence decisions simply 
			because of his aluminum market expertise.
 
 "Deripaska has a good understanding of the aluminum market, taking 
			into account the number of years he has been dealing with it," said 
			Oleg Petropavlovskiy, senior analyst at BCS Global Markets. "En+'s 
			independent directors will probably have their ear to him."
 
 As for the managers recruited by Deripaska over the years to run his 
			empire, a source close to En+ said there were no plans to remove 
			anyone unaffected by the U.S.-mandated restructuring.
 
 The source said: "(En+ is) not pretending that Deripaska is 
			completely removed from the business, that was never the issue. The 
			question is the control of the business, defined by control at 
			shareholders meetings and of the board."
 
 (Additional reporting by Polina Ivanova in Moscow and Clara Denina 
			in London; editing by David Clarke)
 
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