Why $5.2bn sale of Russia’s Yandex assets is significant
A$5.2bn cash and share deal to sell the key Russian assets of technology group Yandex, often labelled as “Russia’s Google”, to a consortium of Russian investors was announced on Monday after months of negotiations.
Here’s why the deal is significant. Moscow has long sought to gain more influence over Yandex, set up in the dotcom boom in the late 1990s, as it became a key player in online services such as search and advertising, email, ride-hailing, e-commerce, cloud and streaming.
The sale to a group of Russian investors would bring Yandex under the control of only Russian entities for the first time.
Yandex, which was floated on Nasdaq in 2011 through Dutch-registered holding company Yandex, has a free-float of almost 88%, with many Western investors among its shareholders. “This is exactly what we wanted to achieve a few years ago when Yandex was under threat of being taken over by Western IT giants,” said Anton Gorelkin, deputy head of the Russian parliament’s committee on information policy.
“Yandex is more than a company, it is an asset of the entire Russian society.
“Yandex has become a fullyfledged Russian IT company.”
Under pressure to comply with Kremlin demands on content, Yandex sold its news aggregator and other online resources to state-controlled rival VK in late 2022, seeking to depoliticise its business. It then began work on the corporate restructuring.
Since Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022, scores of foreign-owned businesses have exited the market, with many abandoning assets on unfavourable terms.
The Kremlin demands a discount of at least 50% on deals involving foreign owners, meaning that although Yandex largely serves the Russian market, it is still subject to those terms. The $5.2bn deal is a significantly lower price than Yandex’s ultimate value — its market capitalisation briefly approached $30bn in 2021 — but would be one of the largest deals since the war began.
Many companies have sold assets for a nominal fee, while Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered the temporary seizure of others, such as assets belonging to Danone and Carlsberg. Yandex managers stressed in a letter to staff that the company would remain independent.
The proposed new owners would be made up of Yandex senior management, a fund controlled by oil major Lukoil and three other companies owned by businessmen Alexander Chachava, Pavel Prass and Alexander Ryazanov.
It was not immediately clear what influence the new Russian ownership may wield. Lukoil did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Reuters sought comment from companies linked to Chachava and Prass. Ryazanov could not immediately be reached for comment.
Yandex said the deal’s cash consideration — up to 230-billion roubles ($2.52bn) — would be paid in Chinese yuan outside Russia. An insider said it was the only currency that suited all parties.
Most Russian banks were disconnected from the SWIFT global payments system soon after Russia invaded Ukraine. Transactions in dollars and euros have become increasingly difficult or impossible.