• Steve LeVine covers foreign affairs for Business Week. He previously was correspondent for Central Asia and the Caucasus for The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times for 11 years. His first book, The Oil and the Glory, a history of the former Soviet Union through the lens of oil, was published in October 2007. Putin’s Labyrinth, his new book, profiles Russia through the lives and deaths of six Russians. The updated paperback was released in April 2009.



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    A Blog on Russia, Energy, the Caspian and
    Beyond

    Friday, October 9, 2009

    Russia: Nobel, Browder, and the Annals of the Pull to Gamble

    Some nine decades ago, Emanuel Nobel, a nephew of Alfred Nobel -- founder of the prizes being awarded this week in Oslo -- fled Baku disguised as a peasant in order to escape the Bolshevik Revolution. As O&G readers know, Alfred Nobels' brothers were the biggest oil barons of all in Baku's 19th-century heyday. In the end, for the Nobels all was lost.

    It wasn't a huge surprise. The story of Western investment in Russia is that of a crapshoot. Pockets laden with cash, all say they are entering with a realistic grasp of the country's perils. All say they are therefore taking precautions. Yet the outcome is always the same -- on the way out, some are wealthier than anyone could dream; others, no longer cash-laden, are wearing no shirt. The trick has been to avoid being the latter.

    So the narrative continues. Hermitage kingpin Bill Browder had been on a soapbox about Russian investment even before Moscow kicked him out of the country three years ago. Now, he is out with a glossy new, 10-minute video detailing his fall as Russia's biggest foreign investor, to his current status as victim of Russia's unpredictable winds.



    The release of the video coincides with a story in yesterday's Kommersant that the Russians intend to issue an international arrest warrant against him. Over at the Reuters blog, my former Business Week colleague Jason Bush notes that Kommersant claimed the very same thing last year, only for the Moscow police to repudiate the report. Still, the public brinksmanship well illustrates the stakes at play in the country.

    Update: Jason Bush has just emailed me an MVD report -- Browder is indeed on Russia's international warrant list for arrest.

    This is a big news week for foreign investors in Russia. On Monday, Norway's Telenor aped the throw-up-your-arms strategy of BP, and caved in to Alfa Group's Mikhail Fridman. After a prolonged court battle in which Telenor initially seemed ultra-confident that it would prevail, it has changed its mind and will embrace the original peace agreement offered by Alfa, its business partner, which will now run the show. As regards BP, the following day, Reuters' Dmitry Zhdannikov reported that the British oil company is resigned to letting Alfa run their partnership as well -- the oil company TNP-BP. Over at aptly named Seeking Alpha, Craig Pirrong calls this a "marriage made in hell," but corporate honeymoons are usually quite short in Russia.

    One thing is for sure -- Moscow is certain that foreign investors will keep returning. On Sunday, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin signaled that Russia would embark on yet another bout of privatization next year. Get out the champagne.

    The indicators are that Putin's confidence is well-placed. In Business Week, Carol Matlack writes that western companies continue to flock to Russia despite the perils. Their rationale is similar to what drives gamblers to Vegas: the excitement (never underestimate the appetite of brio-seeking westerners to seek street cred by working in Russia; as a corollary, do not underestimate the Russians' capacity to notice) , and the long-shot prospect of big, big wealth.

    Take a look at Business Week's "How to Play It" feature in the same issue as the Matlack story. I hadn't noticed this myself, but after last year's breathtaking nosedive, Russian markets are -- at least of now -- doing extremely well in 2009.

    Craps anyone?


    Credit: BusinessWeek

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