Russia can't match a Western asset seizure, but it can inflict pain
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[May 02, 2024]
By Alexander Marrow
LONDON (Reuters) - Russia's ability to mete out like-for-like
retaliation if Western leaders seize its frozen assets has been eroded
by dwindling foreign investment, but officials and economists say there
are still ways it can strike back.
The United States wants to seize immobilized Russian reserves - around
$300 billion globally - and hand them to Ukraine, while EU leaders favor
ringfencing profits from the assets, estimating they will total 15-20
billion euros by 2027.
Much of that money is centrally held, meaning it is accessible if the
West decides to go after it.
Russia says any attempt to take its capital or interest would be
"banditry" and has warned of catastrophic consequences, although it has
been vague about exactly how it might respond.
Former President Dmitry Medvedev on Saturday acknowledged that Russia
did not have enough U.S. state property to retaliate symmetrically and
would have to go after private investors' cash instead - a step he said
would be no less painful.
Reuters spoke to six economists, lawyers and experts who have been
tracking the status of assets frozen by both sides since Russia launched
its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.
The consensus among them was that one of the most likely countermeasures
would be to confiscate foreign investors' financial assets and
securities currently held in special "type-C" accounts, access to which
has been blocked since the war started unless Moscow grants a waiver.
Russia does not disclose how much is in the accounts, held by the
country's National Settlement Depository, a sanctioned entity. Russian
officials have said the amount is comparable to the $300 billion of
Russian reserves frozen.
"Payouts on blocked assets in type-C accounts could start to be seized
in favor of the state," said Vladimir Yazev, investment portfolio
manager at investment firm Aigenis.
"Additionally, the government may consider measures on blocking
non-exchange assets still held by unfriendly countries." These assets
include taxes, grants and private donations.
A Russian lawyer familiar with C accounts, who asked not to be named,
said that if non-residents decline to take part in an asset swap scheme
run by a state-appointed Russian broker, the only remaining option would
be confiscation or foreclosure.
Under the scheme, Westerners would get Russians' blocked holdings of
foreign securities and Russians get Westerners' blocked holdings of
Russian ones. Retail investors wishing to participate have until May 8
to submit offers.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said at the weekend that there was still
a lot of Western money in Russia that could be targeted by Moscow's
counter-measures. He said the government would also pursue legal
challenges against the confiscation of assets.
"Russia...will tirelessly defend its interests," he said.
CORPORATE SEIZURE
On Saturday, Medvedev proposed the confiscation of private individuals'
Russian assets as one response to any U.S. seizure of its reserves,
adding such a move was justified by the "hybrid war" being waged against
Moscow.
The former president, who espouses hardline views towards the West, is a
close ally of President Vladimir Putin and maintains influence as deputy
chairman of the Security Council of Russia.
However, since Western nations imposed sweeping sanctions in response to
the invasion of Ukraine, foreign holdings in Russia have dropped by
around 40% to $696 billion, central bank data shows, reducing some of
the potency of such a threat.
In addition to stakes in companies and physical assets, Russia could
target foreign investment held in securities, according to one of the
economists, who asked not to be named because of the sensitivity of the
subject.
But experts said the latest published figures from Russia's central bank
on foreign direct investment showed that a sizeable proportion of
foreign money was likely coming from Russian companies registered
abroad.
Russia stopped releasing a country-by-country breakdown after the
invasion, but the last such data published for Jan. 1, 2022 showed that
Cyprus, where many Russian firms are incorporated, accounted for almost
30% of all Russia's FDI.
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Russia's Deputy head of the Security Council Dmitry Medvedev takes
part in a wreath laying ceremony marking Defender of the Fatherland
Day at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier by the Kremlin Wall in
Moscow, Russia, February 23, 2024. Sputnik/Yekaterina Shtukina/Pool
via REUTERS/File Photo
Many Russian companies are also incorporated in the Netherlands.
"A chunk of total FDI in Russia is really Russian money already,"
said Gian Maria Milesi-Ferretti, senior fellow in economic studies
at The Hutchins Center on Fiscal and Monetary Policy at the
Brookings Institution, a U.S. think-tank.
Russia's state-run RIA news agency reported in January that Western
firms' assets worth $288 billion were ripe for seizure in Russia,
citing January 2022 data.
Reuters could not determine where RIA took its figures from, but
central bank figures showed $289 billion in derivative and other
foreign investments at that time.
That figure had fallen to $215 billion by end-2023. RIA also said
Cyprus and the Netherlands, respectively, accounted for $98.3
billion and $50.1 billion of those assets, implying a high degree of
Russian company ownership.
The central bank and finance ministry did not respond to a request
for comment on the figures.
'ASSETS FOR A SONG'
Moscow has already forced foreign companies selling assets in Russia
to do so at discounts of at least 50%. It has placed other Western
assets under temporary management and installed Kremlin-friendly
executives.
Western companies have acknowledged losses totaling $107 billion, a
significant sum that goes beyond the value of physical assets.
"Russia has already snatched up affiliates of Western firms, often
for a song," said Milesi-Ferretti. But the value of seized assets is
not just in buildings and machinery, it is also in the technology,
know-how and connections attached, he added.
Energy group Shell, fast food giant McDonald's and carmakers
Volkswagen and Renault have sold their Russian businesses. Others
including Austrian bank Raiffeisen, food group Nestle and U.S. food
and beverage giant PepsiCo continue to do business.
Another area of leverage Moscow has is in Europe, where the
Brussels-based depository Euroclear holds the majority of Russia's
reserves.
Some politicians in the bloc are nervous that the euro could be
adversely affected if other countries such as China - a Russian ally
- start repatriating reserves as a precaution against them being
swooped on down the line.
There is also the risk that Russia could, through court action, try
to seize Euroclear cash in securities depositories in Hong Kong,
Dubai and elsewhere. The worry is that this could drain Euroclear
capital and require a huge bailout.
A Euroclear spokesperson declined to comment on what Russia might
do.
"Euroclear of course takes into account all possible risk scenarios
and strengthens its capital by retaining Russian sanction-related
profits as a buffer against current and future risks," the
spokesperson added.
While its ties with the West have frayed, Russia has used a current
account surplus of almost $300 billion in 2022-23 to build up
overseas assets - likely in so-called friendly jurisdictions that do
not openly oppose the war in Ukraine, according to Milesi-Ferretti.
Russia's efforts to reduce its integration into Western financial
systems since its illegal annexation of Crimea in 2014 have cut
dependence on foreign money, but also limited possible retaliation
in any frozen asset fight, he added.
"If the aim is to retaliate, having a smaller amount of assets to
seize makes your threat less salient."
(Reporting by Alexander Marrow; additional reporting by Reuters in
Moscow and Jan Strupczewski in Brussels; Editing by Mike Collett-White
and Daniel Flynn)
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