Sunday Tribune

TOP BANKER LINKED TO MONEY LAUNDERING

Russian philanthro­pist who led the rush to capitalism accused of dodgy dealing

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FOR more than two decades, Ruben Vardanyan was the face of Westernsty­le investment banking as a founder of Troika Dialog during the birth of Russian capitalism.

He went on to achieve success that brought him billionair­e status and ties to the Kremlin, British royalty and Hollywood.

With his former investment bank now accused of laundering billions of dollars, Vardanyan’s business legacy and image as a philanthro­pist is under assault.

The system dubbed the Troika Laundromat by the Organised Crime and Corruption Reporting Project involved at least 75 offshore companies and exported about $4.8billion between 2006 and 2013, often through fictional deals, with help from a now-defunct Lithuanian bank, according to the OCCRP’S investigat­ive journalist­s.

While Vardanyan wasn’t accused personally of wrongdoing, he was president, chief executive officer and chairman of Troika during this period as well as its principal partner.

He used the bank to pay millions of dollars in personal expenses, according to the OCCRP.

Vardanyan hit back in an open letter this week, saying the reports contained “total inaccuraci­es, informatio­n taken completely out of context, interpreta­tions and pure inventions,” without elaboratin­g.

He helped found Troika in 1991 as communism and the Soviet Union were collapsing. It would grow to become one of the country’s biggest brokers and was among a handful of locally grown players, with Renaissanc­e Capital and United Financial Group, that thrived in the early, Wild West days of Russian capitalism.

At its pinnacle in 2007, before the global financial crisis, Troika hired the pop star Prince to headline a star-studded party for its employees and clients.

State-owned Sberbank paid $1billion to buy Russia’s oldest investment bank from Vardanyan and his partners in 2012, then paid them an extra $400million the following year.

He has since built a high profile as a philanthro­pist in his native Armenia, spending millions of dollars to restore an ancient monastery in the Caucasus country and founding an internatio­nal school, as well as funding the annual $1m “Aurora Prize for Awakening Humanity.”

Vardanyan, 50, met Prince Charles during a 2013 visit to Armenia and the Dilijan Internatio­nal School has links to the British royals’ Dumfries House project in Scotland.

He hosted film star George Clooney in the capital, Yerevan, during the inaugural presentati­on of the Aurora Prize in 2016.

Clooney serves on the prize’s selection committee along with former French foreign minister Bernard Kouchner, ex-us ambassador to the UN Samantha Power, and former Irish president Mary Robinson. Vardanyan, a Russian citizen, was the founding president of the Moscow School of Management at Skolkovo, whose internatio­nal advisory board is chaired by Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev.

President Vladimir Putin attended the ground-breaking ceremony for the campus in 2006.

“Troika was always seen as one of the more above-board players among local banks,” said Tom Adshead, chief operating officer at Moscowbase­d consultanc­y Macro Advisory and a former Troika employee.

“That it helped move funds abroad doesn’t seem too shocking as there has always been a strong incentive here to park money beyond the reach of the Russian authoritie­s.”

The OCCRP’S allegation­s are the latest in a series of laundering cases suspected of funnelling money out of Russia, including $230bn handled by the tiny Estonian unit of Danske Bank A/S between 2007 and 2015, much of it suspicious.

The project reported that clients who moved money through Troika’s offshore network bought real estate in Europe, luxury yachts and artwork, medical and educationa­l services as well as tickets to the soccer World Cup, citing leaked documents.

More than $3.2m of the money was used to pay Vardanyan’s American Express card, fill accounts belonging to his family and fund private school fees for his three children, OCCRP said. Vardanyan has said his bank did nothing wrong.

“It is curiously somehow forgotten which era we lived in: Troika was founded in the early 1990s, when the investment banking industry did not exist in Russia, and the whole country was in a position similar to that of a start-up,” he said in his open letter.

“Even so, we refused to live by the ‘law of the jungle’ and did everything possible to create a civilised environmen­t in Russia with clear rules and standards of conduct.”

The financial crisis and a push by state-owned banks into banking meant the days of high-flying independen­t brokers were numbered.

UFG, which had been acquired by Deutsche Bank AG, lost most of its talent when state-run VTB Group poached nearly 100 bankers in 2008 to set up its own investment bank.

In 2015, the German lender shuttered its securities unit in Moscow amid a separate money laundering scandal.

Renaissanc­e Capital’s founder, Stephen Jennings, was forced to give up control to billionair­e Mikhail Prokhorov in 2012.

Troika, by comparison, came out on top with the sale to Sberbank.

 ?? The New York Times ?? RUBEN Vardanyan is an Armenian investment banker and philanthro­pist who co-sponsored the 100 Lives Initiative. Leaders in the Armenian diaspora, in preparatio­n for the commemorat­ion of the 100th anniversar­y of the Armenia genocide, collaborat­ed with Hollywood celebritie­s and human rights advocates to establish a humanitari­an prize to be awarded annually to those who put themselves at risk to ensure that others survived. |
The New York Times RUBEN Vardanyan is an Armenian investment banker and philanthro­pist who co-sponsored the 100 Lives Initiative. Leaders in the Armenian diaspora, in preparatio­n for the commemorat­ion of the 100th anniversar­y of the Armenia genocide, collaborat­ed with Hollywood celebritie­s and human rights advocates to establish a humanitari­an prize to be awarded annually to those who put themselves at risk to ensure that others survived. |

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