Russian billionaires see wealth rise to over half a trillion dollars
-Forbes
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[April 22, 2023] By
Guy Faulconbridge
MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia's richest people added $152 billion to their
wealth over the past year, buoyed by high prices for natural resources
and rebounding from the huge loss of fortunes they experienced just
after the Ukraine war began, Forbes Russia said.
Russia has 110 official billionaires in the list, up 22 from last year,
according to Forbes' Russian edition, which said their total wealth
increased to $505 billion from $353 billion when the 2022 list was
announced.
The list would have been longer had not five billionaires - DST Global
founder Yuri Milner, Revolut founder Nikolay Storonsky, Freedom Finance
founder Timur Turlov, and JetBrains co-founders Sergei Dmitriev and
Valentin Kipyatkov - renounced their Russian citizenship, Forbes said.
"Last year's rating results were also influenced by apocalyptic
predictions about the Russian economy," Forbes said, adding that the
total wealth of Russia's billionaires was $606 billion in 2021, before
the war began.
After President Vladimir Putin ordered troops into Ukraine on Feb. 24
last year, the West imposed what it casts as the most severe sanctions
in modern history on Russia's economy - and some of its richest people -
in an attempt to punish Putin for the war.
Putin said the West was trying to destroy Russia and has repeatedly
touted the failure of Western sanctions to destroy the Russian economy,
or even stop Western luxury goods - let alone basic parts - from ending
up in Russia.
Russia's economy shrank 2.1% in 2022 under the pressure of Western
sanctions, but it was able to sell oil, metals and other natural
resources to global markets, in particular to China, India and the
Middle East.
The International Monetary Fund this month raised its forecast for
Russian growth in 2023 to 0.7% from 0.3%, but lowered its 2024 forecast
to 1.3% from 2.1%, saying it also expected labour shortages and the
exodus of Western companies to harm the country's economy.
The price of Urals oil, the lifeblood of the Russian economy, averaged
$76.09 per barrel in 2022, up from $69 in 2021. Fertiliser prices were
also high last year.
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Russian billionaire Andrei Melnichenko
attends a session during the Week of Russian Business, organized by
the Russian Union of Industrialists and Entrepreneurs (RSPP), in
Moscow, Russia February 9, 2018. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin/File Photo
Andrei Melnichenko, who made a fortune in fertilisers, was listed as
Russia's richest man by Forbes with an estimated worth of $25.2
billion, more than double what he was estimated to be worth last
year. Melnichenko could not be reached for immediate comment on the
Forbes ranking.
Vladimir Potanin, president and biggest shareholder of Nornickel,
the world's largest producer of palladium and refined nickel, was
ranked as second richest in Russia with a fortune of $23.7 billion.
Potanin could not immediately be reached for comment on the Forbes
ranking.
Vladimir Lisin, who controls steelmaker NLMK and was ranked last
year as Russia's richest man, was placed third in the Forbes Russia
list with a fortune of $22.1 billion. Lisin could not be immediately
reached for comment on the Forbes ranking.
Many Russian billionaires cast Western sanctions as a clumsy, and
even racist, tool.
Building fortunes as the Soviet Union crumbled, a small group of
tycoons known as the oligarchs persuaded the Kremlin under late
President Boris Yeltsin to give them control over some of the
biggest oil and metals companies in the world.
The privatisation deals often propelled the tycoons into the league
of the world’s super rich, earning them the enduring dislike of
millions of impoverished Russians.
But under Putin, some of the original oligarchs, such as Mikhail
Khodorkovsky and Boris Berezovsky, were stripped of their assets,
which eventually ended up under the sway of state companies often
run by former spies.
New Russian names in the Forbes list include billionaires who made
their money in snacks, supermarkets, chemicals, building and
pharmaceuticals, indicating that Russian domestic demand has
remained strong despite the sanctions.
(Reporting by Guy Faulconbridge; Editing by Frances Kerry)
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