The
move comes after the London Stock Exchange (LSE) halted trading
in the depositary receipts of Russian companies roughly a month
ago after prices plunged due to a slew of Western sanctions
slapped on Russia for its invasion of the Ukraine.
Depositary receipts are certificates issued by a bank
representing shares in a foreign company traded on a local stock
exchange.
The sources did not want to be identified because the
information was private.
JPMorgan, the country's largest lender, is the issuer of a
handful of depositary receipts in Russian companies listed on
the LSE, such as oil major Rosneft, according to Refinitiv.
Investors in depositary receipts have the right to cancel them,
but issuers suspended cancellations after the Russian central
bank banned foreigners from transferring local Russian shares.
With those restrictions recently lifted, issuers are able to
reopen cancellations.
JPMorgan is the second depositary receipt issuer to reopen
cancellations after BNY Mellon started offering clients an
option to withdraw from the receipts and receive in turn the
underlying shares in Moscow for a fee last week.
Last week, Economy Minister Maxim Reshetnikov said the country
was mulling forcing Russian companies whose depositary receipts
are traded abroad to return to the domestic market.
(Reporting by Sinead Cruise and Carolina Mandl; Editing by
Michelle Price, Bernard Orr)
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