Kuwait Times

Russian lawmaker Kerimov strikes deal to buy Vozrozhden­ie bank

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MOSCOW: Russian businessma­n and lawmaker Suleiman Kerimov has reached an agreement to buy Vozrozhden­ie bank from its majority owners, brothers Dmitry and Alexei Ananyev, three sources close to the deal told Reuters. The sale forms part of the fallout from a sweeping clean-up of the Russian banking sector last year, which saw the central bank rescue three major lenders, including Promsvyazb­ank, also owned by the Ananyev brothers.

Under the terms of that bailout, the central bank gave the brothers 90 days to reduce their stake in Vozrozhden­ie down to 10 percent, from the approximat­ely 80 percent they currently hold. Earlier this month two sources told Reuters that Kerimov, whose family controls Russia’s top gold producer Polyus , had entered the race to buy Vozrozhden­ie.

Kerimov is ranked by Forbes magazine as Russia’s 21st wealthiest businessma­n, with a net worth of $6.3 billion. He is currently under investigat­ion in France for tax evasion, but was granted permission by French authoritie­s to travel to Russia in January. The three-day business trip was aimed at finalizing the Vozrozhden­ie deal, one source said. He is now back in France and denies the prosecutor­s’ allegation­s, Russian media have reported.

Kerimov family investment firm Bonum Capital subsequent­ly submitted a list of contenders to join the bank’s board, the lender and a Bonum Capital representa­tive said last week.

The bid was successful, three sources told Reuters. They did not know the terms of the deal. Representa­tives from Bonum Capital and representa­tives of the Ananyev brothers both declined to comment. The terms may see no money change hands at all, two sources close to the bank’s leadership told Reuters, on account of the current owners’ existing obligation­s to structures owned by Kerimov.

Representa­tives of the Ananyev brothers did not reply to requests for comment on whether, after Vozrozhden­ie’s sale, they would retain the 10 percent stake which they are permitted.

In securing the deal to buy Vozrozhden­ie, Kerimov has outrun another major contender.

Russian pension fund Blagososto­yanie, owned by state railway operator Russian Railways, had previously offered the Ananyev brothers a deal which would see Vozrozhden­ie merge with the pension fund’s Absolut Bank. The merger, which also would not have seen any money change hands, had been under discussion ever since the death of Vozrozhden­ie founder Dmitry Orlov in 2015. Russia’s No.2 bank, the state-controlled VTB, had also been floated as a contender. —Reuters

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