Russia seeks to halt investor stampede as sanctions hammer economy
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[March 01, 2022] By
Carolyn Cohn and Lawrence White
LONDON (Reuters) - Russia said it was
placing temporary curbs on foreigners seeking to exit Russian assets on
Tuesday, putting the brakes on an accelerating investor exodus driven by
crippling Western sanctions imposed over the invasion of Ukraine.
Russian assets went into freefall on Tuesday with London-listed ishares
MSCI Russia ETF falling 50% to hit a fresh record low and Russia's
biggest lender, Sberbank slumping 21% as investors raced for the exit.
Major money managers, including hedge fund Man Group and British asset
manager abrdn, have been cutting their positions in Russia even as the
rouble slumped to a record low and trading froze on its bonds.
"There is certainly a willingness from asset managers and benchmark
providers to get rid of Russia exposure in their portfolios and
indexes," said Kaspar Hense, a senior portfolio manager at Bluebay Asset
Management in London.
"The big question is where do buyers turn up?"
Moscow's move to impose capital controls mean that billions of dollars
worth of securities held by foreigners in Russia are at risk of being
trapped.
British asset manager Liontrust suspended dealing in its Russia fund
while the prices of some of the most popular Russia-focused exchange
traded funds were trading at a discount to their net asset values.
Ratings agency Fitch has identified 11 Russia-focused funds which have
been suspended, with total assets under management of 4.4 billion euros
($4.92 billion) at end-January, a spokesperson said by email.
WILL NOT INVEST
In a matter of weeks, Russia has turned from a lucrative bet on surging
oil prices to an uninvestable market with a central bank hamstrung by
sanctions, major banks shut out of the international payments system and
capital controls choking off money flows.
Visa Inc and Mastercard Inc have blocked multiple Russian financial
institutions from their networks and Germany's market regulator BaFin
said that it was closely monitoring the European arm of Russia's VTB
Bank, which was no longer accepting new clients.
Shares in some European banks remained under pressure after heavy
declines on Monday because of lenders' exposure to Russia. The sector
remained volatile as Moscow started day six of its invasion.
Asset manager abrdn has around two billion pounds of client money
invested in Russia and Belarus and has been cutting its positions, Chief
Executive Stephen Bird said.
"We will not invest in Russia and Belarus for the foreseeable future,"
Bird said.
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File photo of the skyline of the banking district in Frankfurt,
September 18, 2014. REUTERS/Kai Pfaffenbach
Man Group cut its investments in Russia in recent weeks and now has 'negligible'
exposure to Russia and Ukraine across its portfolio, its Chief Financial Officer
Antoine Forterre told Reuters on Tuesday.
Shares of Austria's Raiffeisen Bank International were down 6% in late morning,
after sliding 14% on Monday. Shares of Italy's UniCredit fell 1%, after Monday's
9.5% fall.
The European Central Bank has put banks with close ties to Russia, such as
Raiffeisen and the European arm of VTB, under close observation following
sweeping financial sanctions by the West that have already pushed one Russian
lender over the edge, two sources told Reuters.
Tuesday's share price swings and investor comments came as Russia faced
increasing isolation over its invasion of Ukraine, with resistance on the ground
denying President Vladimir Putin decisive early gains despite heavy shelling and
a huge military convoy outside Kyiv.
Shares of leading banks fell with the European banking sector slid 1.9% on
Tuesday to a fresh 2-1/2 month low.
In recent days, the United States, Britain, Europe and Canada announced a raft
of new sanctions - including blocking certain Russian lenders' access to the
SWIFT international payment system.
In response, the London Stock Exchange said on Tuesday it would stop trading in
two global depository receipts (GDRs) for VTB Bank after Britain's financial
regulator suspended them in response to sanctions.
India's top lender will not process any transactions involving Russian entities
subject to international sanctions imposed on Russia after its invasion of
Ukraine, according to a letter seen by Reuters and people familiar with the
matter.
Amid wild swings in bank shares, bankers have sought to reassure investors and
the public, saying they are well capitalised and that their footprints in Russia
are relatively small. Some like Blackrock doubled its stake in Polymetal POLYP.L.
Deutsche Bank Chief Executive Christian Sewing told the Bild newspaper that it
would be wrong to assume a quick resolution to the crisis in Ukraine following
the exclusion of Russian banks from the SWIFT payment system.
"That would be the wrong expectation," Sewing said.
(Additional reporting by Frank Siebelt, Huw Jones and Madeline Chambers; Writing
by Tom Sims and Saikat Chatterjee; Editing by Edmund Blair and Carmel Crimmins)
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