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		Shares in Russia's Novatek fall on arrest of deputy head in U.S
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		 [September 24, 2021]  MOSCOW 
		(Reuters) - Shares in Russia's leading non-state natural gas producer 
		Novatek fell on Friday following the arrest in the United States of 
		deputy head Mark Gyetvay, seen as a key figure in the firm's investor 
		relations at a time of major expansion. 
 The U.S. Department of Justice said on Thursday that Gyetvay had been 
		arrested on tax charges related to $93 million hidden in offshore 
		accounts. He faces a lengthy prison sentence if convicted of the 
		charges.
 
 Novatek said in a statement it was trying to find out the details of the 
		arrest, adding it would have no impact on the company's operations. 
		Novatek shares were 1.4% down in the afternoon trade, weaker than the 
		overall market which was 0.2% lower. They fell more than 4% at the 
		opening.
 
		
		 
		Gyetvay has been the leading voice at Novatek, anchoring conference 
		calls with investors and presenting the company at a major industry 
		events as it seeks funds for significant liquefied natural gas (LNG) 
		projects.
 "He has played an important role in the company's strategic planning and 
		he has been pivotal in establishing the excellent relations the company 
		has with its shareholder base. Therefore, we expect a negative stock 
		reaction in the short term," Russian VTB Bank said in a note to clients.
 
 New Jersey-born Gyetvay, 64, moved to Russia in 1995 and worked as a 
		partner at PwC Global Energy. In 2019 Russian President Vladimir Putin 
		granted him the Russian passport, a move, seen potentially helping the 
		U.S. national bypass some sanctions restrictions.
 
		
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			Chief Financial Officer Mark Gyetvay of Russia's gas firm Novatek 
			speaks during the Reuters Russia Investment Summit in Moscow 
			September 11, 2007. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin 
            
			 
A Kremlin spokesperson said Russian diplomats were ready to provide legal 
assistance to Gyetvay in the United States.
 "Because this individual is also a citizen of the Russian Federation, if I 
understand this correctly, he has dual citizenship, of course we are interested 
in his future and the circumstances of the case," Dmitry Peskov told a daily 
conference call.
 
Novatek commissioned its first liquefied natural gas (LNG) plant in the Arctic 
called Yamal LNG in 2017 in a challenge to state-controlled Gazprom, which has 
exclusive rights for export of Russian gas via pipelines.
 The company also wants to build more LNG plants in the Russian Arctic and is in 
the middle of attracting funds of more than 9 billion euros ($11 billion) for 
its Arctic LNG 2 project, to be raised from the Russian banks, Japan, China and 
elsewhere.
 
 ($1 = 0.8522 euros)
 
 (Reporting by Vladimir Soldatkin, Olesya Astakhova and Dmitry Antonov; editing 
by David Evans)
 
				 
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