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I. US SANCTIONS
- OFAC and State Impose Additional Russia
Sanctions: On Thursday, July 20, the US Department of the
Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (“OFAC”)
and the State Department announced nearly 120 additional sanctions
designations pursuant to Executive Order (E.O.) 14024, in order to
further implement the commitments made by G7 Leaders on February
24, 2023 and May 19, 2023. These sanctions aim to
“restrict Russia from accessing critical materials,
inhibit its future energy production and export capabilities,
curtail its use of the international financial system, and crack
down on those complicit in sanctions evasion and
circumvention.” These designations included Kyrgyz
Republic-based entities used by Russia to evade dual use export
controls, sanctions evasions facilitators, Russian importers of
foreign dual use technology, additional entities operating in
Russia’s defense sector, five additional Russian banks, and
Russian entities operating in the metals sector, manufacturers of
energy industry equipment, manufacturers of energy-related
chemicals, and a Russia-based energy industry investor.OFAC also issued two new Russia-related General Licenses in
connection with the sanctions: (1) General License 70 for certain wind-down
activities involving Joint Stock Company Ural Mining and
Metallurgical Company; and (2) General License 71 for certain
wind-down activities involving the newly designated Russian banks.
Both General Licenses are valid until 12:01 a.m. ET on October 18,
2023. Read more )) Read more
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more )) and Read more
)) - Suspected Russian Intelligence Operative Extradited to
Face Charges on Smuggling U.S.-Made Electronics and Ammunition to
Russian Military: On July 14, Vadim Konoshchenok, a
Russian citizen with alleged ties to Russia’s Federal Security
Service (FSB), was extradited from Estonia and indicted by the US
Department of Justice for conspiracy and other charges related to a
global procurement and money laundering network on behalf of the
Russian government. The charges against Konoshchenok were announced
in December 2022, alleging him of affiliation with Serniya
Engineering and Sertal LLC, Moscow-based companies that operate
under the direction of Russian intelligence services to procure
advanced electronics and testing equipment for Russia’s
military, with electronic communications showing Konoshchenok
explicitly identifying himself as an FSB officer and his contacts
with apparent FSB personnel. Konoshchenok was detained by Estonian
authorities when he attempted to smuggle U.S.-origin items across
the border into Russia in October 2022. Read more
)) and Read more
)) - Biden Administration Announces Additional Security
Assistance for Ukraine: On July 19, the US Department of
Defense announced that the Biden Administration, through the
Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative (USAI), is providing a new
security assistance package to Ukraine. USAI is an authority under
which the U.S. procures capabilities from industry or partners to
be sent to Ukraine, and this announcement represents the beginning
of a contracting process to provide additional priority
capabilities to Ukraine. The capabilities in this package, totaling
at $1.3 billion, include National Advanced Surface-to-Air Missile
Systems (NASAMS) and munitions, artillery rounds, mine clearing
equipment, TOW missiles, Unmanned Aerial Systems (UAS), precision
aerial munitions, counter-UAS and electronic warfare detection
equipment, and other equipment, communications systems, and
support. Read more
)) - USAID Administrator Travels to Ukraine, Announces
Additional Assistance Measures: On July 17-19, USAID
Administrator Samantha Power travelled to Ukraine and announced a
number of measures to continue U.S. support towards Ukraine.
Specifically, this includes more than $500 million in additional
humanitarian assistance for Ukrainians, an additional $250 million
through the Agriculture Resilience Initiative-Ukraine
(AGRI-Ukraine) to support the moving of Ukrainian food to the
global market, expansion of partnership with Bayer to further
support Ukrainian farmers, $15 million in additional assistance for
mental health and psychosocial support services programming in
Ukraine, and an additional $230 million in Ukraine’s economy
and reconstruction. Read more
)) - US and UK Hold Inaugural Strategic Sanctions
Dialogue: On July 19, the Department of State hosted a
senior UK government delegation for the inaugural U.S.-UK Strategic
Sanctions Dialogue in Washington, DC. The Dialogue delivered on the
2023 Atlantic Declaration commitment to strengthen cooperation on
sanctions strategy, design, targeting, implementation, mitigations,
and enforcement. The delegations discussed the use of targeted
sanctions to deter and disrupt malign activity, and pledged to
continue to intensify coordination on United Nations and autonomous
sanctions regimes, as well as to look beyond bilateral coordination
to broader efforts with partners to show collective leadership. The
delegations also focused on collaboration to protect humanitarian
activity from unintended impacts of sanctions. Read more
)) - Secretary of Defense Austin Call With Ukrainian
Minister of Defense: On July 17, Secretary of Defense
Lloyd J. Austin III spoke with Ukrainian Minister of Defense
Oleksii Reznikov to discuss priorities for tomorrow’s virtual
Ukraine Defense Contact Group meeting, which will focus on
Ukraine’s near-term air defense and ammunition requirements, as
well as support and sustainment for Ukraine over the long term.
Secretary Austin updated Minister Reznikov on U.S. security
assistance efforts, and Minister Reznikov provided an update of
developments on the ground in Ukraine. The two leaders pledged to
remain in close contact. Read more
)) - New Zealand Banker Sues U.S. Government Agencies and
Officials Over Russia Sanctions: On July 18,
Law360 reported that New Zealand banker Paul Goldfinch, a
former board member of sanctioned Russian bank Otkritie, is suing
the US Department of State, other enforcement agencies and
prominent US officials for sanctions against him, despite his
attempts to show that he no longer maintains Russian ties.
According to a complaint filed on July 17, Goldfinch resigned from
the board at Otkritie and terminated his relationship, financial
and otherwise, with the bank immediately after the latter was
sanctioned by the OFAC in February 2022, but nonetheless discovered
that he was also sanctioned for his involvement with the bank
nearly two weeks after his resignation. Goldfinch alleges that the
U.S. government has failed to delist him from the Specially
Designated Nationals And Blocked Persons List despite over a year
of “good faith” inquiries, and that the
sanctions have been “entirely catastrophic for [him], both
personally and financially.” Read more
)) - U.S. Expresses Regret Over Russia’s Suspension of
Participation in Black Sea Grain Initiative: On July 17,
the Department of State issued a press statement expressing its
deep regret over Russia’s decision to suspend participation in
the Black Sea Grain Initiative. The U.S. emphasized that the
Initiative has contributed significantly to shipping Ukrainian
grain and foodstuffs to the most food insecure regions of the
world; that despite Russia’s claims, the UN has facilitated
record Russian exports of food, and no G7 sanctions are in place on
Russian food and fertilizer exports. The U.S. also thanked the UN
and Türkiye for their work to extend the Initiative, and urged
the Russian government to reverse its decision. Read more
)) - U.S. Chamber of Commerce Urges Protection from Suit for
U.S. Companies Complying with Russia Sanctions in Good
Faith: On July 13, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce
(“Chamber”) published an open letter to the Members of
the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, Senate Committee on
Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, House Committee on Foreign
Affairs, and House Committee on Financial Services, urging
protection from lawsuits for U.S. companies who have complied in
good faith with sanctions on Russia. Specifically, the Chamber
urges the Committees to advance legislation to provide U.S.
companies legal protection in U.S. courts from claims or
enforcement of foreign judgments or arbitral awards related to the
cessation of operations in Russia, highlighting that similar
protections for companies complying with sanctions in good faith
are already in place under EU and UK laws. Read more
))
II. EU SANCTIONS
- EU Foreign Affairs Chief Proposes Weapons Fund For
Ukraine: The Commission’s foreign affairs chief Josep
Borrell has prepared a proposal that EU countries should commit to
long-term military support for Kyiv with a €20 billion fund
that would co-finance weapons purchases. Slovenian Foreign Minister
Tanja Fajon said the proposal responded to the “need for long
term predictability of military aid for Ukraine.” Read more
)) - Anticipated EU Sanctions on Belarus: This
week, POLITICO reported that EU countries informally agreed to a
package of military sanctions targeting Belarus. The package is
expected to include restrictions on battlefield equipment,
including aviation parts. The exact items will mirror EU sanctions
against Russia as part of an effort to crack down on military
components being illegally routed through Belarus to Russia. Read more
)) - European Parliament Calls For ICC Arrest Warrant
Against Belarussian Leader Lukashenko: The European
Parliament called on the International Criminal Court (ICC) on July
18 to issue an arrest warrant against Belarusian leader Alexander
Lukashenko. The EU’s legislative body stated that Belarus under
Lukashenko’s regime bears responsibility for crimes committed
against Ukraine, particularly for the deportation of Ukrainian
children. Read more
)) - EU Adopts New Restrictive Measures Against Iran For
Military Support To Syria and Russia: On Thursday, July
20, the EU announced new restrictions prohibiting the export from
the European Union to Iran of components used in the construction
and production of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs). It also provides
for travel restrictions and asset freeze measures that could be
imposed against persons responsible for, supporting or involved in
Iran’s UAV’s programme. Read more
)) - EU Council Adopts Renewal Of Temporary Trade
Liberalisation Measures With Moldova: On Thursday, July
20, the EU Council adopted a regulation which renews and expands
the temporary suspension of all outstanding tariffs and the
entry-price system that are still applicable to seven agricultural
products for another year, until 24 July 2024. The difference in
coverage, compared to last year, consists in fully liberalising the
import to the EU as the current legislation suspends all tariff
rate quotas (TRQ) that are still in place. Read more
)) - EU Renews Sanctions On Russia’s Military Aggression
Against Ukraine: On Thursday, July 20, the EU Council
decided to prolong by six months, until 31 January 2024, the
restrictive measures targeting specific sectors of the economy of
the Russian Federation. The measures currently consist of a broad
spectrum of sectoral measures, including restrictions on trade,
finance, technology and dual-use goods, industry, transport and
luxury goods, etc. Read more
)) - EU Proposal To Use Frozen Russian Funds Delayed To
September: A European Commission proposal to use frozen
public Russian assets to help finance Ukraine will not be published
until September, an EU spokesman said on Thursday, July 20. The
European Union first floated this idea in November and is focused
on finding a legal way to use the tax on the interest made by these
blocked assets to benefit Ukraine. The EU is reportedly being
careful to make sure the proposal would hold up in court in the
event of any lawsuits. Read more
)) - Poland and Hungary Threaten To Cut Off Ukraine’s
Export Route To The West: Poland will unilaterally block
trade with Ukraine if the European Commission fails to extend
temporary restrictions on grain imports at least until the end of
the year, Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki told a meeting of
agriculture ministers from five Eastern EU countries in Warsaw on
Wednesday. Hungarian Agriculture Minister echoed Morawiecki, saying
his country would “protect Hungarian farmers with all its
means.” Read more
)) - European Aluminium Considers Calling For EU Ban On
Russian Aluminium: Europe’s aluminium industry group,
European Aluminium, has considered lobbying for European Union
sanctions on Russian aluminium, but would oppose specifically
targeting the country’s largest producer Rusal , according to a
document sent to members. The head of European Aluminium said it
prepared the internal memorandum for planning purposes and had no
information about any imminent EU sanctions. Read more
)) - Turkey Looks West As It tightens Its Sanctions
enforcement: Turkey has increased Russia-related sanctions
enforcement, including the inspection of goods being exported and
imported to and from Russia. Thus far, Turkey has been walking a
difficult tightrope as a mediator, exemplified by its brokering of
the Black Sea Grain Initiative, which played a vital peace function
until its recent collapse. Read more
))
III. UK SANCTIONS
- UK Law Society Parliamentary Briefing on Legal Services
Restrictions: On July 13, 2023, the UK Law Society
published a parliamentary briefing note, outlining its concerns
about the Russia (Sanctions) (EU Exit) (Amendment) (No. 3)
Regulations 2023 on the Legal Services Restrictions recommending
that:- immediate action by the government is required to address the
most severe unintended consequences of these restrictions in the
form of an interim general licence, and that longer term change
will be likely require a further or amended statutory
instrument; - the restrictions as currently drafted will harm non-Russian
businesses more than Russian businesses, and will negatively impact
the ability of solicitors to support businesses in complying with
sanctions legislation and exiting the Russian market; - one significant problem with the regulations is that while they
permit UK lawyers to provide advice on whether a client’s
prospective activity is prohibited by UK sanctions, if it is so
prohibited, UK lawyers cannot advise on whether it is also
prohibited by EU or US sanctions, which ignores the reality that
many UK lawyers are asked to advise in relation to multiple
jurisdictions; - these restrictions are significantly more onerous than US
sanctions, where OFAC guidance confirms that legal advice on
whether an action would constitute a breach of any
jurisdiction’s sanctions law would not contravene US sanctions;
and - the EU restrictions only apply to advice provided to the
Russian Government or to Russia-based entities. Read
more))
- immediate action by the government is required to address the
- Financial Sanctions Update: Russia: On July
17, 2023, the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office updated
the UK Sanctions List. Under the Russia sanctions regime, 14
entries have been added and 10 entries have been amended to the
designation in response to Russia’s attempts to destroy
Ukrainian national identity. The new entries include:- 11 individuals for their alleged involvement in the forced
deportation and re-education of Ukrainian children, including
Sergey Kravtsov, Minister of Education, and Ksenia Mishonova,
Moscow Commissioner for Children’s Rights; - Anton Krasovsky and Timofei Nikolaevich Sergeitsev, alleged
Russian propagandists for promoting policies which undermine the
independence of Ukraine; and - Artek International Children’s Center, which engages in the
re-education of Ukrainian children with the alleged aim of
destroying Ukrainian national identity.The amended entries include
amendments to the statement of reasons for 9 individuals, removing
references to specific companies to which the individuals were
connected, and instead referring more generally to businesses in
sectors of strategic significance to Russia. Read more
)) andRead more
))
- 11 individuals for their alleged involvement in the forced
- UK Will Publish General Licence Permitting Those Within
the Scope of UK Russia Sanctions to Advise on Compliance with All
Sanctions Regimes: On July 18, 2023, HMG announced at the
Ministry of Justice webinar that it will publish a General Licence
as soon as possible permitting those within the scope of UK
sanctions to advise on compliance with all UK sanctions regimes
(not just UK sanctions) including US and EU sanctions. It may amend
the regulations after that if needed. The proposed General Licence
is said to be required because the new legal services restrictions
in the UK’s Russia sanctions regimes expressly permit advice on
compliance with UK sanctions but do not mention non-UK sanctions
regimes. Read more
)) - Sanctions Regime Put to Legal Test in UK As Oligarch
Seeks Release Of Assets: On July 19, 2023, it was reported
that Eugene Shvidler a billionaire oil businessman and a long-time
business associate of sanctioned oligarch Roman Abramovich, is
bringing his case to London’s High Court seeking a court order
to release his assets including two private jets. Shvidler’s
request for the release of his assets is the first case to reach
the UK high court involving an individual. A number of other cases
are waiting to be heard if he succeeds. Shvidler’s lawyers
argue that he has not visited Russia for more than 15 years and has
no political links to the country. The Foreign Office said Shvidler
had obtained financial benefit from his relationship with the
Russian regime. The sanctions legislation is drawn broadly so that
it covers anyone who is benefiting or has benefited from supporting
the Russian government, whether financially or politically. The aim
has been to maximise ministerial discretion, making the grounds for
delisting narrower. Read more )) - UK Updates Export Control Guidance: On July
19, 2023, the UK Export Control Joint Unit (ECJU) published the UK
Strategic Export Controls Annual Report 2022 and has:- published guidance on how EU general export authorisations
permit the export of specified controlled dual-use goods from
Northern Ireland to certain countries outside the EU; - updated references to the military and WMD end-use control in
its export controls guidance; - added details of the requirement for record-keeping for checks
by the ECJU; and - added an application page for a strategic export control
licence. Read
more)) and Read more))
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and Read more))
andRead more
))
- published guidance on how EU general export authorisations
- Financial Sanctions Update: Russia: On July
20, 2023, the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office updated
the UK Sanctions List. Under the Russia sanctions regime, the list
was updated to remove individual Oleg Yurievich Tinkov, the founder
of Tinkoff Bank from the designation. Mr Tinkov has been critical
of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and says that he was forced to
sell his shares in Tinkoff Bank by the Kremlin in April 2022. Read more
)) - Financial Sanctions Update: Mali, Central African
Republic and Sudan: On July 20, 2023, the Foreign,
Commonwealth and Development Office published a press release and
updated the UK Sanctions List. Under the Mali, Central African
Republic (CAR) and Sudan sanctions regimes, 13 individuals and
entities linked to the Russian Wagner Group were added to the
designation. The new entries include:- Ivan Aleksandrovitch Maslov, head of the Wagner Group in
Mali. - In CAR: (i) Vitalii Viktorovitch Perfilev and Konstantin
Aleksandrovitch Pikalov leader and operational head (respectively)
of the Wagner Group in CAR; (ii) Alexander Alexandrovich Ivanov,
Aleksandr Grigorievitch Maloletko, and Dimitri Sytii, individuals
key to the operation of the group in CAR; and (iii) Mining company
Lobaye Invest Sarlu, and its subsidiary, Sewa Security Services, a
CAR-based security company. - In Sudan, M-Invest, its mining subsidiary, Meroe Gold, and its
directors, Andrei Sergeevich Mandel and Mikhail Potepkin; and
Al-Solag Mining, a company associated with Meroe Gold.
Read more
)) and Read more
)) and Read
more)) andRead
more))
- Ivan Aleksandrovitch Maslov, head of the Wagner Group in
IV. RUSSIA/UKRAINE SANCTIONS
- Russia Warns Shipping In Danger After Quitting Black
Sea Grain Deal: This week, Russia said that it would no
longer guarantee the safety of shipping in the northwestern Black
Sea after quitting a year-old deal that allowed Ukraine to export
tens of millions of tons of grain. The Black Sea grain deal had
offered an economic lifeline both to Ukrainian farmers and
food-insecure nations hit by turmoil on agricultural markets.
Read more
)) - Ukraine Threatens Russian Ships In Black Sea:
Ukraine on Thursday warned that all ships sailing to
Russian-controlled Black Sea ports could be targeted by attacks
— a response by Kyiv to Moscow’s threat against civilian
vessels traveling to Ukrainian seaports. Kyiv’s defense
ministry said in a statement that such vessels “may be
considered by Ukraine as carrying military cargo with all the
corresponding risks” from midnight Friday. Read more
)) - Ukrainian Central Bank Moves To Nationalise Ukrainian
Sense Bank (Previously Known As Alfa-Bank Ukraine):
Ukraine’s central bank on Thursday placed a top commercial
lender co-owned by Russian oligarch Mikhail Fridman under
administration, and appealed to the government to nationalise it,
citing links to the Kremlin and its full-scale invasion. “A
decision was made to withdraw joint stock company Sense Bank from
the market,” the National Bank of Ukraine said in a statement.
Read more
)) - Russia Tightens Exit Rules for Foreign
Businesses: Russian authorities have drafted a 10-point
list of requirements that would complicate foreign businesses’
exit from and potential return to Russia. Foreign companies are
barred from including buyback options on the sale of their Russian
assets for two or more years. Another commission rule requires new
owners to place up to 20% of the purchased assets on the Russian
stock market within a year and finish the listing within three
years. Read more
))
V. Other Notable Developments
- Canada Announces New Round of Sanctions Against Russian
Celebrities and Wagner Group Members: On July 20, Canadian
Foreign Affairs Minister Melanie Joly announced that the Canadian
federal government is further imposing sanctions on 38 individuals
and 25 entities alleged of supporting Moscow’s invasion of
Ukraine and mercenary violence in Africa, according to reports. The
list reportedly focuses on the paramilitary Wagner Group, which has
sent combatants to Ukraine and across Africa; as well as
Russian’s nuclear, drone and cultural industries, in response
to the country’s attacks on Ukraine’s nuclear and cultural
sites. Those sanctioned also include Russian actors and singers.
Read more )) and Read more
)) - Australia Imposes Additional Sanctions in Response to
Russia’s Invasion of Ukraine: On July 20, Australian
Minister for Foreign Affairs Penny Wong announced that Australia is
imposing targeted sanctions on 35 entities and 10 individuals in
Russia and Belarus. The entities and individuals sanctioned are
said to be of economic and strategic significance to Russia, such
as Russian companies supplying the Russian military, Russian
entities involved in nuclear energy and Arctic resource extraction,
major Russian defence entities including Russia’s largest
producer of military helicopters and its CEO, as well as senior
Russian and Belarusian officials. Read more
)) - Japan to Ban Used Car Exports to Russia as Part of
Extra Sanctions: On July 18, Kyodo News reported that
Japan is set to ban the export of used cars to Russia as part of
additional economic sanctions on the country over its invasion of
Ukraine, sources close to the matter said. While Japan has
prohibited shipments to Russia of luxury vehicles worth more than 6
million yen ($43,000) since April 2022, sources said the planned
additional sanctions are also expected to cover cars with gasoline
or diesel engines exceeding 1,900 cc, as well as electric and
hybrid vehicles. The move to restrict exports of used Japanese
cars, which are in high demand in Russia, aims to enforce the
effectiveness of embargoes on Moscow by keeping in step with EU and
U.S. measures. Read more
)) - IOC Says It Will Not Invite Russia and Belarus to the
Paris 2024 Olympics: On July 14, the International Olympic
Committee (IOC) announced that teams from Russia and Belarus will
not receive formal invitations to participate in the 2024 Olympic
Games in Paris due to the two nations’ aggression towards
Ukraine, according to reports. The IOC, however, has yet to decide
whether to allow individual athletes holding Russian or Belarusian
passports to participate in the Paris 2024 Olympics, saying that it
“will take this decision at the appropriate time, at its
full discretion, and without being bound by the results of previous
Olympic qualification competitions.” Read more
)) - Argentina Rejects Russia-Sourced LNG Cargo, Diverts
Vessel Back to Sea: On July 19, Bloomberg reported that
Argentina’s state-run energy company refused to accept a cargo
of liquefied Russian natural gas it had agreed to buy, forcing the
tanker back out to sea. Argentina’s economy minister Sergio
Massa said in a local media interview that officials blocked
delivery of the fuel “because it violates the contract
because it’s a sanctioned company,” despite the
country not adopting any sanctions against Russia. Gunvor Group
Ltd., the trading house that made the delivery, said the shipment
of LNG was lawful and transparent, and the transaction
“complies with all applicable economic sanctions,
specifically those of the United States and the European
Union.” Read more
)) - Kyrgyzstan Denies Helping Russia Bypass
Sanctions: On July 20, Kyrgyzstan denied helping its ally
Moscow circumvent sanctions imposed over its invasion of Ukraine,
but did not rule out the involvement of private companies,
according to reports. According to Kyrgyzstan’s security
agency, neither the state or any state structures or companies are
involved in the violation of sanctions regime imposed by the West,
though it admitted that private companies might have violated
sanctions while “possibly not knowing who the end customer
and user of their supplied products may be,” adding that
an investigation has been launched to “establish[] and
stop[] such activities.” A number of Kyrgyz entities were
put under sanctions by the U.S.’s OFAC on July 20, 2023, for
facilitating the flow of controlled foreign-made electronics and
technology into Russia. Read more
)) - South African Official Says BRICS Currency Not on
August Summit Agenda: On July 20, reports emerged that a
BRICS currency will not be on the agenda of the bloc’s summit
in South Africa next month, but Brazil, Russia, India, China, and
South Africa will continue to switch away from the U.S. dollar,
according to a South African senior BRICS diplomat. Brazil’s
President Luiz Inacio Lula de Silva and Russian foreign minister
Sergei Lavrov are among BRICS leaders that touted the idea of a
common currency as the bloc aims to challenge the western dominance
of global finance amid Russia’s sanctions-imposed exile after
it invaded Ukraine last year, pushing countries, especially
non-U.S. allies, to seek alternatives to the dollar, but
India’s foreign minister had said earlier this month that
currencies would remain “very much a national issue for a
long time to come.” Read more
)) - SLB Announces Halting of All Shipments to
Russia: On July 14, top oilfield services firm SLB
announced that it is halting shipments of products and technology
into Russia from all its operations over an expansion of Western
sanctions, according to reports. The firm, being the world’s
largest oil service and equipment provider, had been one of the few
providers to continue working the country’s oil sector
following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, but would now apply the
Russia ban to all its worldwide operations not limited to the UK,
US, EU and Canada, “in response to the continued expansion
of international sanctions.” Read more
)) - JP Morgan Says Client Shares in Russia’s Magnit May
be Missing: On July 13, Reuters reported that JP Morgan
(JPM) has become the latest major bank struggling to find Russian
stocks linked to certain client investments. In a published
investor circular, the Wall Street bank said “it was
actively seeking to recover” shares in Russian retail
group Magnit, which underpinned depositary receipts (DRs) JPM had
issued to investors before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in
February 2022. JPM said the shares in question “may be
missing” after “certain holders”
cancelled their DRs twice, firstly under a business-as-usual
process, and again after Moscow introduced laws on mandatory
conversion of DRs to reduce foreign influence. The shares currently
unaccounted for are estimated to be less than 1% of the shares held
in custody at another financial institution, according to the bank.
Read more
)) - Ryanair announces plans for post-war return to
Ukraine: Low cost airline Ryanair announced on July 20 its
plans to return to the Ukrainian market within eight weeks of
Ukrainian air space reopening. It plans to open 75 routes from
Europe to Ukraine and base up to 30 new Boeing 737 MAX aircraft
worth over $3 billion at Ukraine’s main airports. Ukrainian
airspace remains closed to civilian aircraft since the full-scale
invasion began. Read more
)) - South African President: Putin not to attend BRICS
summit: Russian dictator Vladimir Putin will not attend
the upcoming BRICS summit and Russia will be represented by Foreign
Minister Sergey Lavrov, South Africa’s presidential office
informed on July 19. Putin’s participation at the summit has
been contentious due to the arrest warrant issued against him by
the International Criminal Court (ICC). Read more
)) - China Imports Record Volumes Of Russian Oil In First
Half Of 2023: China is importing record volumes of oil
despite a weak economy as it takes advantage of cheap Russian crude
to build stockpiles and export refined products. The rise in oil
imports to record levels this year comes against the backdrop of a
faltering recovery in the world’s second-largest economy.
Read more
))
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