Page 67 - RusRPTJuly18
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At least the state-owned retail banking giant Sberbank has been making an effort. The bank has been responsible for the entire banking sector’s profit on its own for several years and has   increased its dividend payments from 25% in 2016 to 36% for the 2017 payout . The bank made a record-high net profit of RUB749bn and will pay RUB271bn ($4.4) in dividends, doubling the 2016 payout of RUB135bn in absolute terms. "I think [Sberbank shares] were one of the most profitable investments of last year," Gref boasted in April.
Gazprom is another one that is dodging the 50% dividend order, claiming that it needs to spend extra cash on several huge pipeline projects. The company had a   weak 2017  posting negative free cahs flow but has had a much   stronger first quarter  this year on the back of high demand in Europe. the lack of dividends are another aspect of the scandal that broke after   Sberbank analyst Alex Fak claimed that Gazprom has spent $93bn on infrastructure projects  that benefit no one but the contractors – all friends of president Vladimir Putin – who was promptly fired for calling it like it is.
The situation at Rosneft, the state’s other massive hydrocarbons company is better as the company is pledging to cut its record-high debt burden to investors in an effort to improve its valuation and said in April that it will pay out 505 of profits as dividends – but has some conditions.
The company will pay RUB6.65 per share , which comes on top of the RUB3.83 per share the company has already paid for the first half of 2107. The total shareholders will receive for 2017 becomes RUB10.48 per share, which is half of the company’s net profit for 2017. The caveat is the dividends will be paid to the company’s holding company parent Rosneftegaz, which is also chaired by Rosneft CEO Igor Sechin. Russian Finance Minister Anton Siluanov complained that also technically the company has fulfilled the order, the money gets stuck at the holding company level and never reaches the budget.
Other state-owned flagship companies such as Aeroflot and Transneft, have also said they will pay out 50% and now investors are awaiting their AGMs to see if they hold to their word.
The other major group of companies near the top of the dividend yield table are from real estate and include LSR Group and Etalon Group, which are benefiting from the economic recovery and rising incomes.
The board of   LSR Group  recommended a   “solid” 2017 dividend payout  at RUB78 per share, which is a dividend yields of 9.3%, beating the estimates by 10%,  BSC Global Markets  commented on May 31.
And after   Etalon posted 61% year-on-year net profit boost  to RUB7.9bn ($130mn) in 2017 it is also expected to stick to its policy of paying out 40%-70% of profits with the consensus saying it will pay 50%.
However, it has not gone well for everyone. The London-listed AFK   Sistema board of directors cut its dividends in half (47%) despite   boasting a healthy recovery in first quarter profits . The company is still recovering from a bruising corporate war with state-owned oil major Rosneft  last year that cost it $1.76bn in an out of court settlement and contravenes the company’s otherwise generous dividend policy.
RUSSIA Country Report  July 2018 www.intellinews.com


































































































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