Russian tycoons say U.S. 'oligarch list' may cause problems with banks

Reuters  |  MOSCOW 

By and Denis Pinchuk

(Reuters) - Russian companies may start experiencing problems in their dealings with banks as a result of the U. S. government's so-called "oligarch list," several named in the list said on Friday.

In late January, dozens of Russian billionaires were included in a list drafted by the U. S. Treasury Department, in line with a sanctions package signed into law last year, but the list did not imply the people named were, or would be in the future, subject to any restrictions.

"Compliance of all banks, of European banks in particular, will be more cautious, more nit-picking, of course," said Vladimir Yevtushenkov, a controlling shareholder of Russian

"Of course, it will be much harder to syndicate loans... It is a serious blow and we need to work out our strategy, how we're going to live with it," Yevtushenkov, who features on the list, told reporters.

He and other were speaking before a meeting between and the of Industrialists, known informally as the "oligarch union", in on Friday.

The U.

S. list was discussed during a closed-door part of the meeting, but discussion was brief and not substantive, the of the Union, Alexander Shokhin, told reporters. He did not provide further details.

During the open part of the meeting, Putin made no mention of the U. S. list but said that "the sanctions challenge" would most likely persist for some time.

He also said that "the policy of artificially restricting international business relations" is a path that will "lead everyone, including the originators of such policies, to miss out on profits and to incur direct losses."

Russian Andrei Melnichenko, who controls the Russia-focused Eurochem, also said Russian companies could experience problems in future dealings with banks as a result of the list.

"It's unpredictable. Probably, there will be some difficulties," he said.

The list does not mean anything good and those included on it could potentially face delays in external financing, Vagit Alekperov, co-owner of Lukoil, said.

"works in the global market, of course, our partners will be approaching deals more carefully," said Alekperov.

"It is a real list. The pure fact of its existence is already negative."

(Reporting by Denis and Darya Korsunskaya; Writing by and Polina Devitt; Editing by Mark Potter and Kirsten Donovan)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, February 09 2018. 23:06 IST