Nornickel plans to raise employees' stake in mining giant, says top
shareholder
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[September 17, 2022]
MOSCOW (Reuters) -Russian mining giant
Nornickel plans to increase the equity holdings of employees and other
individuals to collectively comprise 25% of the company, up from 10%
now, its largest shareholder Vladimir Potanin told RBC TV.
Nornickel, the world's top palladium and refined nickel producer, was
one of the biggest prizes in the post-Soviet carve-up of Russian
industry in 1990s, and it currently employs 72,000 people.
"When Norilsk Nickel (Nornickel) was privatised about 25% of shares were
owned by employees," Potanin said in an interview broadcast on Saturday.
"I would like to recover this historical justice and make sure that 25%
of Nornickel's shares are returned to the people, including employees."
Potanin said the change would be included in a 10-year programme called
"Digital Investor" that would begin in 2023, and would involve digital
financial assets and lock-up periods. He did not give further details
about the plan or how the equity holdings would be increased.
Potanin's holding, Interros, owns 36% of Nornickel.
Aluminium producer Rusal, which owns 26% of the company, did not
immediately reply to a Reuters request for comment.
Potanin in July floated the idea of a $60 billion merger of Nornickel
with Rusal as a means of mitigating possible sanctions risks, but on
Saturday said the idea had been postponed.
"I think the idea is still interesting, still alive, but we will have to
put it off until later, when our colleagues are ready for talks on
this," Potanin said.
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The logo of Russia's mining company
Norilsk Nickel (Nornickel) is seen during the St. Petersburg
International Economic Forum (SPIEF) in Saint Petersburg, Russia
June 15, 2022. REUTERS/Maxim Shemetov
He also said a 10-year shareholder agreement protecting Nornickel's
dividend payouts was on track to expire at the end of 2022.
The deal ended a conflict between Interros and Rusal in 2012. There
are no talks to renew the deal, sources told Reuters earlier this
month.
Potanin also said Nornickel was preparing to reorient itself more
towards Asian markets, to guard against any change in the West's
sanctions policy or clients trying to "twist our arms".
Nornickel has not been directly targeted by the Western sanctions
imposed on Moscow since it sent thousands of troops to Ukraine on
Feb. 24.
"Some of our partners are trying to revise the terms of existing
contracts in their favour, trying to reduce the volume of purchases
for the upcoming period, imposing on themselves a kind of
self-sanctions, moving away from goods of Russian origin as much as
possible," the Potanin said.
In the first seven months of this year, Europe accounted for the
usual 50% of Nornickel's sales and the United States about 20%, he
added.
(Reporting by Polina Devitt, Anastasia Lyrchikova and Alexander
MarrowEditing by Pravin Char and Helen Popper)
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