<DIV>What is this, open season on Russian billionaires?</DIV>
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<DIV>Business Day (South Africa)<BR>May 3, 2004<BR>Writing in the snow for Norilsk Nickel<BR>By John Helmer<BR><BR>In the snow, Russian peasants still say, the law is like a sleigh. A clever <BR>judge can steer it either way.<BR><BR>Vladimir Potanin, controlling shareholder of Norilsk Nickel, Russia's <BR>largest mining group, should know. In the decade after he acquired the <BR>assets that comprise his multibillion-dollar holding Interros he has had <BR>his share of success in the courts fighting off legal challenges to his <BR>takeovers.<BR><BR>His methods, which were accepted by former president Boris Yeltsin, and the <BR>size of his wealth, combined with his political clout, have led Potanin to <BR>be publicly dubbed one of Russia's oligarchs.<BR><BR>And last week he got the message that he might be on the receiving end of <BR>Kremlin investigation.<BR><BR>A powerful rumour swept Moscow and international markets that he had been <BR>called for questioning by the
procurator-general, the federal <BR>law-enforcement arm of Russian President Vladimir Putin.<BR><BR>Rumours about the Russian oligarchs are common, but investigation of their <BR>business activities by the prosecutors are rare.<BR><BR>In two days of share trading, Norilsk Nickel lost more than $2bn in market <BR>capitalisation. In the past two weeks, it has shed $4,5bn.<BR><BR>The federal prosecutors first issued a refusal to confirm or deny the <BR>rumour. Then one said in carefully chosen words that "currently we don't <BR>have information that Potanin has been in our office". That left open a map <BR>of other geographical possibilities for the get-together, and it left an <BR>ominous warning for Potanin as well as CEO Mikhail Prokhorov and Norilsk <BR>Nickel.<BR><BR>Not that this was the first warning they have received. In February Putin <BR>intervened to halt the implementation of a law, which he had earlier signed <BR>into effect. If implemented, it would have allowed Norilsk
Nickel to <BR>declassify hitherto state secret data on reserves, production, sales and <BR>stocks of platinum group metals.<BR><BR>This data release, promised for early this year, is one of the requirements <BR>for Norilsk Nickel and its two controlling shareholders to offer the <BR>company shares on western stock exchanges, or for Potanin to swap his <BR>shares for another internationally listed company.<BR><BR>But state opposition to opening up the company to foreign buyers blocked <BR>the legislative move. It was rushed through parliament. But the president <BR>was preoccupied at the time with parliamentary and presidential elections. <BR>When Putin later learned what was at stake he changed his mind.<BR><BR>When the law was suspended, Potanin was warned that a major cash-out <BR>transaction that would transfer sizeable wealth in Norilsk Nickel to <BR>foreign hands in return for the offshore enrichment of Potanin would not be <BR>permitted.<BR><BR>Potanin evidently did not
listen. Nor did he pay attention to a second <BR>warning, also in February, that blocked the planned issue of a $1bn <BR>convertible bond by Interros. That move would have allowed Potanin to take <BR>the cash, and leave in the hands of foreign bondholders the right to claim <BR>Norilsk Nickel shares.<BR><BR>Undeterred, Potanin got the idea of buying into Gold Fields, using mostly <BR>borrowed funds; and then later, he told banking associates in Moscow, to <BR>merge their gold assets in Norilsk Nickel into a majority takeover of Gold <BR>Fields shares.<BR><BR>The first deal was thought to be a boon for Anglo American, which had been <BR>looking to sell its stake for months.<BR><BR>If the Kremlin's shadow falls on Potanin, and he is obliged to sell out of <BR>Gold Fields so he can return the money to his motherland, it is unlikely <BR>another bank would be keen to agree to join a lending syndicate after <BR>Citibank's six-month deadline is reached. If such a scenario unfolded,
<BR>Citibank may have to demand its money back, and if the scenario unfolded it <BR>could lead to a situation where Potanin may have no alternative but to sell <BR>out of Gold Fields, quickly.<BR><BR>Over the next month, the prosecutors do not have to say any more to make <BR>credible their warning that Potanin may not be permitted a cash-out deal.<BR><BR>Framing a charge sheet against Potanin, and then compiling a multicount <BR>indictment is not necessary for this warning to stick.<BR><BR>Besides, there simply are not enough staff to prepare such documents, so <BR>heavily are they already committed to the prosecution and coming trials of <BR>the two leading Yukos oil group shareholders in prison since last year, <BR>Platon Lebedev and Mikhail Khodorkovsky.<BR><BR>They are in prison because they tried to cash out a stake of about 40% in <BR>Yukos by selling it to ExxonMobil or ChevronTexaco. Putin warned them not <BR>to; they ignored the warnings. The charges against them, and
against Yukos, <BR>relate to a myriad of shareholding and cash transfers, tax-avoidance <BR>schemes, fraud, and forgery.<BR><BR>Since February it seems Potanin may have been courting the same fate. <BR>Potanin's biggest concern now is to find out what Putin is really thinking, <BR>and whether last week's rumour and reports were started to test Putin's <BR>will, or Potanin's nerves.<BR><BR>In this game, as in last year's Kremlin attack on Lebedev and Khodorkovsky, <BR>there is no telling what Putin intends until after he has moved, and the <BR>oligarch's assets are publicly in danger.<BR><BR>So the Gold Fields transaction may be no more than a trigger. What is near <BR>certain is that the Russian authorities are looking closely at Potanin's <BR>control of Norilsk Nickel.<BR><BR>Vladimir Litvinenko, rector of the St Petersburg State Mining Institute, <BR>and an adviser to the president on resource policy, said recently he <BR>favoured giving the state a "golden share" in Norilsk
Nickel. He has yet to <BR>elaborate on that.<BR></DIV><p>
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