The Guardian (USA)

Abramovich could face US sanctions after hedge fund links revealed

- Edward Helmore in New York

US authoritie­s appear closer to adding Roman Abramovich to their list of sanctioned hyper-rich Russians, after reports surfaced of a complex transactio­n of funds through a US hedge fund that was linked to the UK- and Europeansa­nctioned owner of Chelsea football club.

Abramovich, reputedly the onetime steward on Boris Yeltsin’s plane, and tapped by the then up-and-coming Vladimir Putin to manage Russian state-owned energy assets, was reported by the New York Times on Monday to be behind a $20m transfer from a shell company registered in the British Virgin Islands to an investment vehicle in the Cayman Islands controlled by a US hedge fund.

According to the newspaper, the singular transfer was the culminatio­n of months of work by “a small army of handlers and enablers in the United States, Europe and the Caribbean” that may have placed billions of dollars of Abramovich’s fortune with prominent US hedge funds and private equity firms.

“In some cases, participan­ts weren’t even aware of whose money they were helping to manage,” the Times reported.

The transactio­n was organized by Concord Management, a US investment consultanc­y in White Plains, New York, that has been named as a vehicle through which the 55-yearold Abramovich may have invested $1.3bn with US financiers, including Empyrean Capital Partners in Los Angeles, Millstreet Capital Management in

Boston, Millennium Management, Sarissa Capital Management and Sculptor Capital Management.

Concord executive Michael Matlin issued a statement that described the firm as “a consulting firm that provides independen­t third-party research, due diligence and monitoring of investment­s”.

The report comes days after a red flag alert was issued by the US Financial Crimes Enforcemen­t Network (Fincen), advising “all financial institutio­ns to be vigilant against potential efforts to evade the expansive sanctions and other US-imposed restrictio­ns implemente­d in connection with the Russian Federation’s further invasion of

Ukraine”.

“In the face of mounting economic pressure on Russia, it is vitally important for US financial institutio­ns to be vigilant about potential Russian sanctions evasion, including by both state actors and oligarchs,” said Fincen’s acting director, Him Das.

The US government has also announced potential $5m payouts to Americans offering informatio­n leading to seizure of assets belonging to superrich Russians, via the justice department kleptocrac­y taskforce.

Abramovich, who is believed to be in Moscow, has not been placed on US sanctions lists, despite what is reported to be a frantic effort by him to sell funds via Concord on the secondary market since at least late February.

One of his yachts, the 533-foot Eclipse, equipped with two swimming pools, helipads and a mini-submarine, is currently docked in New York.

The EU imposed sanctions on Abramovich last week, saying his “privileged access” to Putin has “helped him to maintain his considerab­le wealth”. It followed similar penalties by the UK.

Another of Abramovich’s two superyacht­s, Solaris, is currently in Turkish waters, according to Reuters. Turkey has not agreed to follow or enforce UK and EU sanctions on Russian oligarchs, including Abramovich.

But the Biden administra­tion has identified his Gulfstream G650ER jet, considered one of the most prestigiou­s in private aviation, for apparent violations of US export controls after it broke sanctions by flying to Moscow in recent weeks.

Despite Abramovich not being named by the US, a number of US-based hedge funds have reportedly agreed to freeze his assets under guidance from the UK.

“Currently, accounts attributed to Roman Abramovich are blocked from transactin­g. As such, any distributi­ons, redemption­s or payment cannot be made and no subscripti­ons or contributi­ons can be accepted,” fund administra­tor SS&C Globe Op wrote.

The report comes as the Internal Revenue Service has asked US legislator­s to approve more resources for the US sanctions program, and lawmakers push a bill, known as the Enablers Act, that would require investment advisers to identify and vet their customers.

According to documents cited by BuzzFeed, the Concord advisory firm at the center of the 2012 Abramovich transactio­n, may have arranged more than 100 investment­s in different hedge funds and private equity firms, mostly for Abramovich.

The outlet cited a 2015 and 2016 report by State Street, a financial services firm, that it had filed “suspicious activity reports” concerning transactio­ns that Concord arranged involving some of Abramovich’s Caribbean shell companies.

 ?? Photograph: John Sibley/Reuters ?? Roman Abramovich, pictured here in 2015, has not yet been placed on the US sanctions list.
Photograph: John Sibley/Reuters Roman Abramovich, pictured here in 2015, has not yet been placed on the US sanctions list.

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