The Borneo Post

Putin’s shrunken economy lures foreign investors

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EVEN before the US presidenti­al election raised hopes of warmer ties with the Kremlin, some big Western companies were betting Russia’s economy will soon come out of the deep freeze.

Big retailers like Sweden’s Ikea Group and France’s Leroy Merlin have begun pumping billions of dollars in new stores and factories, counting on Russia’s consumers to start emerging from hibernatio­n after two years of recession.

Ikea is putting US$ 1.6 billion ( RM7 billion) into new stores over the next five years or so. Leroy Merlin in September announced a two-billion- euro plan to more than double the number of outlets in Russia over the same period. Pfizer is building a new drug factory, while Mars Inc. is expanding plants for chewing gum and pet food.

“This is the moment for investment,” said Walter Kadnar, country head for Ikea, which last launched a new store in Russia five years ago but this fall opened a US$ 60 million furniture factory near St. Petersburg and acquired land for a third Mega mall near the city.

“I strongly believe in the potential of the Russian market long-term.” Foreign investment all but ground to a halt as the country sunk into recession and conflict with the West over the last two years. Companies including General Motors slashed local operations.

For many of those who stayed, now is the time to reopen their wallets to get a jump on rivals.

The rouble’s plunge, though it decimated the value of local earnings in dollars and euros, has driven production costs in Russia down sharply. By some estimates, they’re now lower than those in China.

“The last two to three years have been a disaster,” said Frank Schauff, head of the Associatio­n of European Businesses in Moscow. “Now, the situation is changing as the rouble exchange rate has stabilised and the Russian economy is forecast to return to growth soon.”

The government said its annual meeting of foreign investors in September drew the most top executives in a decade. Foreign direct investment surged to US$ 8.3 billion in the first nine months of this year, more than the US$ 5.9 billion reported for all of 2015, according to central bank data.

That’s still far below the levels seen before the Ukraine crisis, which together with US and European Union sanctions and the plunge in oil prices and the ruble made many big companies reconsider investing.

Still, the rise in foreign investment is a modest bit of good news for the capital-starved economy. Overall, businesses in Russia are still holding back on expansion, with capital investment down 2.3 per cent in the first nine months of this year. The government expects only a tepid recovery with growth of 0.8 per cent next year. The middle class – the target market for most big foreign investors – has shrunk by 14 million people over the last two years, according to Sberbank CIB, a local investment bank.

Alexis Rodzianko, president of the American Chamber of Commerce in Russia, said geopolitic­al tensions have been a big deterrent for potential foreign investors.

The election of Donald Trump, who praised President Vladimir Putin and questioned the sanctions during the campaign, could change that.

“Trump has a more open mind regarding the US-Russia relationsh­ip,” Rodzianko said. “It’s clear there is room for improvemen­t and that in itself is hopeful.”

For those companies not put off by the chilly political winds, adapting to the plunge in the ruble’s value – it’s down about 50 per cent since the crisis began in early 2014 – and the drop in Russians’ incomes has required some ingenuity.

Ikea is selling fewer big-ticket items like kitchens and more pots and gadgets for Russians who increasing­ly cook at home because they can’t afford to go out.

At the malls it owns, managers note the “lipstick effect’’ – makeup and lingerie stores are thriving as consumers treat themselves to lower- cost luxuries, while those that sell more costly clothes and shoes have seen sales plunge.

Ikea and the other big foreign players say their sales have actually gone up in ruble terms over the last two years.

Overall, retail sales in Russia are down 5.3 per cent this year, having dropped 10 per cent in 2015.

“We are seeing signs of improvemen­t,” PepsiCo Chief Executive Officer Indra Nooyi said in September. Even after the plunge in the rouble, Russia remains the company’s thirdbigge­st market after the US and Mexico.

The company expanded cheese output after the Kremlin cleared the market by banning most imports. This month, it announced plans for a new US$ 40 million baby-food plant in southern Russia. —WPBloomber­g

 ??  ?? A worker arranges cut and dusted sheets of Wrigley’s doublemint chewing gum on the production line inside the Wrigley’s plant, operated by Mars Inc., in St. Petersburg, Russia, on Sept 14. — WP-Bloomberg photos
A worker arranges cut and dusted sheets of Wrigley’s doublemint chewing gum on the production line inside the Wrigley’s plant, operated by Mars Inc., in St. Petersburg, Russia, on Sept 14. — WP-Bloomberg photos

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