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						Bankers suggest Russian firms delist as sanctions 
						uncertainty bites
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		 [February 07, 2019]   
		By Olga Popova, Anastasia Teterevleva and Maria Kolomychenko 
 MOSCOW (Reuters) - Uncertainty caused by 
		the expansion of U.S. sanctions on Russia last year has pushed 
		companies' share prices lower, prompting investment bankers to suggest 
		their clients should delist from local and international exchanges.
 
 Once a booming market for equity listings, there were no initial public 
		offerings in Russia last year for the first time in at least a decade.
 
 Share listings allow companies to raise cash for business expansion or 
		other purposes but a fall in their share price can trigger early debt 
		repayments or a need to increase collateral held against loans. Public 
		status also requires a regular disclosure of information, some of which 
		may be sensitive.
 
 Delisting solves these issues.
 
 Russian food retailer Dixy was one of those that decided to delist from 
		the Moscow Exchange last year, while Megafon, Russia's No.2 phone 
		operator, canceled its London-listed shares and said it would consider 
		doing the same for its Moscow listing.
 
		
		 
		
 At the same time, around $4 billion worth of IPOs were delayed in 2018 
		and while the banking community still expects some of those to 
		eventually come to market, they are suggesting other companies delist.
 
 "Business in Russia is just dying because of the sanctions," an 
		investment banker from a top-five Russian bank said. "Bankers are 
		actively working on the buyback programs and delistings from 
		international bourses."
 
 SPECIAL APPROACH
 
 One of the companies approached by bankers last year was Sistema which 
		is listed in Moscow and London, two banking sources and a source close 
		to the company said.
 
 One of the banking sources said that apart from Sistema, another two or 
		three companies were looking at the delisting option.
 
		
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			 Sistema tycoon owner 
			Vladimir Yevtushenkov attends a session of the Eastern Economic 
			Forum in Vladivostok, Russia September 12, 2018. Mikhail Metzel/TASS 
			Host Photo Agency/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo 
            
			 
Sistema, the holding company for a number of assets from agriculture to toys and 
telecoms, has a market capitalization of $1.46 billion in Moscow, while its MTS 
unit, Russia's top mobile phone operator, has a market capitalization of $8 
billion.
 The banking source said Sistema had decided against delisting its shares due to 
the high cost of a buyback when its net debt was already 585 billion rubles 
($8.85 billion).
 
 A source close to Sistema confirmed that bankers approached the company last 
year about a delisting, adding that the company was working to reduce its debt.
 
Sistema, controlled by the Russian businessman Vladimir Yevtushenkov, would have 
to spend 31 billion rubles to buy the 32.4 percent of its shares which are free 
floating in order to delist, according to Reuters calculations based on 
Sistema's current market capitalization.
 Yevtushenkov also confirmed to Reuters that bankers had pitched a delisting to 
his company but declined to comment further.
 
 A spokesman for Sistema said that the company's management did not study and are 
not currently studying a delisting.
 
 "At the same time, Sistema is regularly analyzing the situation on capital 
markets and looking at the opportunities arising," the spokesman said.
 
 ($1 = 66.0675 rubles)
 
 (Additional reporting by Tatiana Voronova, Oksana Kobzeva and Katya Golubkova; 
Editing by Kirsten Donovan)
 
				 
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