Russia 100526 Basic Political Developments


Dow Jones: Russia's Inter RAO To Get Billion In State Assets –Vedomosti



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Dow Jones: Russia's Inter RAO To Get $10 Billion In State Assets –Vedomosti


http://www.easybourse.com/bourse/international/news/838543/russias-inter-rao-to-get-10-billion-in-state-assets-vedomosti.html


  • Publié le 25 Mai 2010

  • Copyright © 2010 Dowjones

- DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
OAO Inter RAO UES (IRAO.RS) will get $10 billion in assets from Russia's government in exchange for shares in the state-controlled electricity trader, business daily Vedomosti reports Wednesday.
Inter RAO is preparing to issue 13.8 trillion shares to state entities -- nearly six times its authorized capital. Chief Executive Boris Kovalchuk said Tuesday that the company's board, headed by Deputy Prime Minister Igor Sechin, recently approved a plan to place the shares during this year's fourth quarter and the first quarter of 2011, according to Vedomosti. Shareholders will vote on the plan at their June 25 annual meeting.
The 43 assets will come from Federal Grid Co. of Unified Energy System (FEES.RS); civilian nuclear company Rosatom; electric power generators RusHydro (HYDR.RS), RAO Energy System of the East (VRAO.RS), Irkutskenergo (IRGZ.RS), Novosibirskenergo (NVNG.RS) and Bashkirenergo (BEGY.RS); all units of wholesale generator OGK; 12 of the 14 units of generator TGK; 11 energy distributors including OAO Rosneft (ROSN.RS) subsidiaries RNenergo and RusEnergoSbyt, the latter of which has Italian utility Enel SpA (ENEL.MI) as minority shareholder; power-equipment maker EM Alliance; and two design institutes.
Kovalchuk didn't specify which state entities will be getting shares of Inter RAO from its forthcoming issue, or in what amount.
Newspaper website: www.vedomosti.ru

Bloomberg: Prokhorov May Bid for Swedbank’s Russian Unit, Kommersant Says


http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=av6KlzR3UyT4

By Maria Ermakova

May 26 (Bloomberg) -- Billionaire Mikhail Prokhorov may bid for Swedbank AB’s loss-making Russian unit if Finland’s Pohjola Oyj doesn’t buy it, Kommersant reported, citing unidentified person familiar with the plans of Prokhorov’s MFK bank.

Click here for web link

To contact the reporter on this story: Maria Ermakova at mermakova@bloomberg.net

Last Updated: May 26, 2010 01:01 EDT
2010-05-26 08:47
Reuters: Metals tycoon eyeing Swedbank's Russia unit -paper

http://www.iii.co.uk/news/?type=afxnews&articleid=7911920&subject=general&action=article
MOSCOW, May 26 (Reuters) - Russian businessman Mikhail Prokhorov is considering buying the Russian unit of Swedish bank Swedbank, Kommersant newspaper reported on Wednesday citing market sources.
Swedbank said a year ago it could sell down its interests in its Russian and Ukrainian units.
Prokhorov, who cashed out of his stake in top world nickel producer Norilsk Nickel just before markets melted down in 2008, has deployed some of his cash in distressed financial assets.
He owns half of top Russian investment bank Renaissance Capital. He also purchased the New Jersey Nets basketball team in the United States.
Earlier reports have pointed to Finnish group Pohjola as another contender for the unit, which had lent heavily to the construction industry.

((Writing by Melissa Akin; Editing by Lidia Kelly and Dan Lalor) Keywords: SWEDBANK/RUSSIA (melissa.akin@reuters.com; +7 495 775 1242)


MAY 26, 2010

WSJ: A Russian Bank's Strategy: Double the Stock in 3 Years


http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704026204575266060306042680.html?mod=WSJ_latestheadlines

By WILLIAM MAULDIN


MOSCOW—VTB Group, Russia's second-biggest bank, will ditch its traditional emphasis on corporate lending, targeting efficiency rather than aggressive growth in a three-year bid to double its stock price, Chief Executive Andrei Kostin said.

In an interview before the board meeting to approve the new strategy, expected Wednesday, Mr. Kostin said he would shrink the proportion of low-margin loans to big state-controlled companies that can now borrow more cheaply than VTB on international markets. The bank will instead compete for deposits to reduce reliance on international funding, and it will focus on its more profitable retail- and investment-banking businesses. "Our corporate banking is not quite efficient," Mr. Kostin said.

The goal of the new strategy, dubbed "The Road to 15," is to raise return on equity, a measure of profitability and efficiency, to more than 15% in 2013 for each of the bank's three main businesses, a move Mr. Kostin believes will boost the stock price to 15 kopecks (about half a U.S. cent), comfortably above the 2007 IPO price of 13.6 kopeks and more than double Tuesday's closing price of 6.59 kopeks on Moscow's Micex.

The share price of state-controlled VTB is politically sensitive, because more than 100,000 ordinary Russians bought into the ill-fated offering as a part of a program of "People's IPOs" promoted by then-President Vladimir Putin. Minority shareholders have even demanded the government buy back the shares at the IPO price.

During the financial crisis, the government pumped capital into VTB and other state banks, pushing them to lend to boost liquidity and rescue important companies. Now those loans are turning out not to be as profitable as retail loans and investment banking: VTB's net interest margin for corporate lending hasn't been above 4.1% in the past three years, compared with 7.5% for its retail portfolio, according to UBS AG.

Meanwhile, Russian bank lending is just starting to grow again, after shrinking slightly in the first quarter of 2010 as debt-ridden companies shied away from relatively expensive credit in uncertain times. Banks are also waiting for nonperforming loans to peak, which could happen as early as this summer, according to bank chiefs, depending on commodity prices and Russia's flagging economic recovery.

Under its three-year strategy, VTB expects its net income to jump to between $4 billion and $5 billion in 2013, compared with a forecast of $1.59 billion in 2010 and a loss of $1.9 billion in 2009, when the bank swelled its reserves against a wave of bad loans triggered by the financial crisis and a drop in commodity prices.

VTB plans to shift its 100 biggest clients to its investment-banking unit, known as VTB Capital, and seek new corporate clients in regions outside Moscow and St. Petersburg, Mr. Kostin said. But he conceded that the structure of the Russian economy makes lending to smaller companies difficult, with behemoths such as OAO Gazprom and OAO Rosneft dominating the landscape and the small and medium-size business sector less developed than in some Western countries.

The bank is looking at expanding into direct consumer lending in shopping malls, perhaps through a partnership or acquisition, and this could help boost overall retail banking to the goal of one-quarter of the group's assets at the end of 2013, from 18% at present, Mr. Kostin said. The share of its corporate business will slip to "slightly higher" than 50%, from an estimated 64% at the end of 2010.

Surrounded by photos of Mr. Putin—now prime minister—and current President Dmitry Medvedev, Mr. Kostin brushed aside suggestions that the government would persuade him to lend to other state-controlled enterprises, undermining the bank's push for greater profitability.

He said that while Mr. Putin pressed VTB and other top banks to lend more during the financial crisis, no one told the bank who should receive a loan. He said the bank halted loan growth in the previous two quarters as liquidity returned to Russia and the government grew less "outspoken on this."

He also said he sees no need for VTB to increase its loan-loss reserves, unless Russia is hit by a second wave of economic problems.



Write to William Mauldin at william.mauldin@dowjones.com


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