Page 9 - bne IntelliNews Country Report: Ukraine Dec17
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Russia’s   increasingly   sophisticated   and   well   financed   raw   materials   companies were   ideally   placed   to   invest   in   Ukraine   and   make   a   killing.   Severstal   acquired 60%   of   Dneprometiz   shares   in   2006   and   built   up   its   stake   to   98.6%   in subsequent   years.   It   had   no   intention   of   going   anywhere   until   the   political relations   were   wrecked.
Also   in   October,   Russian   steel   giant   RusAl   sold   its   Mykolaiv   alumina   plant   to Switzerland-headquartered   trader   Glencore.   "Soon   we   expect   that   managing specialists   from   Glencore   will   come   to   the   plant,"   Interfax   news   agency   quoted the   plant's   director   general   Dmytro   Myrny   as   saying   at   the   time.   "We   expect that   the   transition   period   will   last   for   around   one   year."   The   Ukrainian   plant provided   RusAl   with   10.5%   of   the   primary   raw   materials   for   the   production   of aluminium   –   alumina   –   according   to   Vedomosti.
Meanwhile,   metallurgical   giant   Mechel   has   lost   its   Donetsk-based electrometallurgical   plant   because   of   the   nationalisation   of   assets   by   the Kremlin-backed   rebels   of   the   government   of   the   so-called   Donetsk   People's Republic.
In   2017,   Russia's   second   largest   steel   company   Evraz,   which   is   controlled   by Russian   oligarch   Roman   Abramovich,   also   sold   a   99.42%   stake   in   Ukrainian iron   ore   producer   Evraz   Suha   Balka   for   $108mn   to   Berklemond   Investments Ltd.,   a   member   of   the   fast   growing   DCH   Group   controlled   by   Ukrainian businessman   Alexander   Yaroslavsky.
Evraz   also   agreed   to   sell   another   Ukrainian   subsidiary,   Evraz   Yuzhkoks,   in October,   2016.   However,   the   deal   has   not   yet   been   closed.   The   representative of   Evraz   did   not   answer   questions   sent   by   Vedomosti.   In   August,   Evraz's president   Alexander   Frolov   said   that   the   company   "have   variants   and   the understanding   how   to   sell   it",   but   "it   is   too   early   to   speak   of   any   potential   deal or   its   terms".
At   the   same   time   the   group   does   not   intend   to   sell   Dneprovsky   Iron   and   Steel Works   as   it   considers   its   operation   stable   and   effective.   "We   see   the   potential to   create   additional   value   for   the   site",   the   Ukrainian   Metal   online   outlet   quoted Frolov   as   saying   at   the   time.
The   exit   of   the   Russian   metal   companies   comes   in   parallel   with   the   exodus   of Russian   state-owned   banks.   Amongst   the   largest   in   the   country,   the   National Bank   of   Ukraine   (NBU)   made   it   clear   they   are   no   longer   welcome   earlier   this year.   The   population   even   went   as   far   as   to   brick   up   the   entrance   of   one branch   of   Russian   state-owned   retail   giant   Sberbank   to   make   the   point.
Sberbank   is   now   gone.   The   National   Bank   of   Ukraine   (NBU)   approved   the purchase   of   the   Lviv-headquartered   middle-sized   VS   Bank,   a   subsidiary   of Sberbank,   by   local   banker   Sergiy   Tigipko   on   November   8.
However,   the   chances   of   its   sister   bank   VTB   being   sold   are   small,   according   to Andrei   Kostin,   CEO   of   VTB.   VTB   Bank’s   Ukrainian   subsidiary   planned   to   raise its   capital   by   $99mn   by   issuing   new   shares,   the   bank   said   in   a   statement   on August   19,   but   since   then   appears   to   given   up   any   hope   of   rescuing   anything from   the   rubble.
"We'll   be   downsizing   our   business   there   and   our   expenses,   selling   assets   little by   little,   withdrawing   what   loans   we   can   and   maybe   selling   all   kinds   of
9       UKRAINE  Country  Report   December    2017                                                                                                                                                                                www.intellinews.com


































































































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