Business Day

Why $5.2bn sale of Russia’s Yandex assets is significan­t

- Alexander Marrow /Reuters

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.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Tech giant: Yandex logo on display at the Russian technology giant’s headquarte­rs in Moscow, Russia.
/Reuters Tech giant: Yandex logo on display at the Russian technology giant’s headquarte­rs in Moscow, Russia.

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