Financial screws turned on Russia as insurers exit, London stocks halted
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[March 05, 2022] By
Carolyn Cohn and Lawrence White
LONDON (Reuters) -Russia's global financial
isolation intensified on Friday as the London Stock Exchange (LSE)
suspended trading in its last Russian securities and some insurers
withdrew cover from exporters over Moscow's invasion of Ukraine.
Banks, investors and insurers have in recent days ratcheted up that
pressure by exiting investments in Russia and halting the provision of
their services.
The LSE said it had suspended global depositary receipts (GDRs), which
represent shares in a foreign company, for eight Russian companies,
including Magnit and Sistema, after freezing trading in 28 firms on
Thursday.
Later on Thursday the exchange said it had also suspended some
exchange-traded-funds' with Russian securities.
The trading halts come as Britain, the European Union and the United
States continue to roll out financial sanctions on Russia to prevent its
companies from accessing Western markets.
In another turning of the screws on Moscow, trade credit insurers, who
provide a financial safety net for exports and imports, are pulling back
from covering businesses exporting to Ukraine and Russia given the risks
of sanctions, high claims or missed payments, industry sources said.
The move in the nearly $3 trillion global market will heap further
pressure on Russia's already teetering economy.
"In this last week, trade credit insurers will have paused supporting
new risk for Ukraine and Russia," said Nick Robson, global leader for
credit specialties at insurance broker Marsh.
European Union officials are also examining curbing Russia's influence
and access to finance at the International Monetary Fund following the
invasion, six officials told Reuters. [L2N2V71XO]
"For its part, Washington will continue to embrace multilateral
sanctions, (and) target the wealth of Russian oligarchs as part of a
pressure campaign," Isaac Boltansky, policy director for brokerage BTIG
wrote in a note on Friday.
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The London Stock Exchange Group offices are seen in the City of
London, Britain, December 29, 2017. REUTERS/Toby Melville
INVESTORS OUT
British insurer and asset manager Royal London became the latest Western
investor to say it will sell its Russian assets as soon as possible, after a
rush of similar announcements in recent days.
"We can't trade these things anyway, but as soon as we can, we obviously intend
to divest," Royal London Chief Executive Barry O'Dwyer told Reuters.
The CEO of another major British investment group, Schroders, said on Thursday
Russian stocks and bonds are now "in the realms of utterly uninvestable".
Swiss wealth manager Julius Baer has halted new business with wealthy Russians,
two sources familiar with the bank's operations told Reuters.
Some investors are however piling into funds linked to Russia, seeing current
distressed levels as a potentially cheap entry point for Russian assets.
Deutsche Bank said it has been stress-testing its operations in Russia, where it
employs some 1,500 workers in a major technology centre, as banks with a
significant Russian presence grapple with the ramifications of its growing
financial isolation.
(Reporting by Carolyn Cohn and Lawrence White, additional reporting by Michelle
Price, Tom Sims and Frank Siebelt in Frankfurt, editing by Alexander Smith,
Jonathan Oatis and David Gregorio)
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