This might be of interest.

The Moscow Times
Tuesday, October 26, 2004. Page 10.

What End to the Endgame?

By Christopher Weafer

Twelve months after the arrest of Mikhail Khodorkovsky
triggered an escalation in the investigation of Yukos
by the Tax Ministry and the launching of several
criminal cases against Menatep shareholders, there is
still no clear understanding of how or when they will
end.

Uncertainty surrounding the likely resolution of the
Yukos/Menatep case continues to be the major cause of
stock market volatility and is regarded by many as the
true reason why several credit rating agencies
continue to withhold investment-grade status for
Russian sovereign debt. More broadly, the case has
also provoked a lively debate as to the residual
effect it will have on the credibility of Russia as an
"attractive investment location," an ideal that
President Vladimir Putin has frequently made reference
to over the past few years. This has been a crucial
element of his declared strategy to eventually create
a more diversified economic base with greater wealth
distribution across the population.

The evidence from the stock market and the recent
price trend of Russian debt suggests that investors
are bored with the issue and now simply want the
uncertainty to end so that an assumed major obstacle
to increased local and foreign institutional portfolio
investment in Russia can be removed. The optimistic
perspective is supported by the fact that, despite
well-publicized concerns over the legal protection of
property rights, major multinational groups, such as
Total and Conoco, are continuing to make investment
commitments to Russia.

There is plenty of evidence to support the view that
the actions against Yukos and its controlling
shareholder, Menatep, are a "one-off" and therefore
will not be repeated -- or, at least, not in such an
aggressive way -- against other business groups.

This case could actually be considered a necessary
part of the Kremlin's strategy for regaining control
over the strategically important oil industry, as well
as economic planning generally.

Putin has made it very clear that he regards the
breakdown of the former Soviet control structure in
the 1990s as the main reason for almost all of the
problems that he inherited from Boris Yeltsin in early
2000, and while restoring strong political control has
been an obvious priority during his first term, he
also made it clear that his vision of a "state-private
enterprise partnership" is one where the state sets
the broad directional growth parameters and private
enterprise is expected to adjust investment strategies
to help achieve the state's goals.

The Yukos/Menatep case presented a very neat
opportunity for Putin both to recover a big slice of
the state's former control in the country's main
strategic industry and also to teach a lesson to in
the consequences of challenging the state's declared
economic priorities the business community. In early
2003, Mikhail Khodorkovsky lobbied very actively to
try to force the government to change its declared
strategy of creating a three-year gap in adding new
oil export capacity, so as to allow the Finance
Ministry the opportunity to increase the tax take from
the oil companies to fund budgetary mechanisms that
would help boost growth in manufacturing industries.

Such a window was also considered necessary to help
mobilize political and public support behind the
proposed reform package. That did not suit
Khodorkovsky's ambitions for increased exports to the
United States and China, and he tried to force a
change in government policy.

On a practical level, one of the immediate
consequences of this action has been a significant
broadening of the tax base in Russia and a sizable
increase in the amount of tax raised. Tax collection
over the first half of this year, for example, showed
an increase equal to 1.1 percent of GDP over the same
period in 2003.

Eventually this case will have to end and when it
does, there will be a strong relief rally on the stock
market -- the abundance of liquidity in the hands of
local investors will ensure that. This whole case has
dragged on for far too long, and often aggressive or
inconsistent actions on the part of the state agencies
involved suggests that while the decision to pursue
this case must have been made at a senior government
level, there was no thought given to the mechanisms
for realizing it in practice. This is something that
we have seen in other important areas, such as in the
slow progress on reforms, and raises concerns among
long-term investors that while Putin may remain
committed to the ideal of an "attractive investment
case" and the broad economic and structural reform
program, he simply does not have the administrative
support infrastructure to realize them. The Yukos
affair highlights the apparent inability of government
agencies to complete the relatively simple task of
quickly raising a tax bill to approximately the net
valuation of the targeted asset.

Without progress in advancing the reform package,
investment growth will likely remain narrowly based,
raising concerns that inward investment will either be
directed toward natural resources or more speculative
areas such as real estate. While that strategy will
likely sustain growth over the medium term, the
economy will ultimately become even more dependent on
the commodity price cycle.

That leads us to the next concern which is that should
headline growth slow due to a decline in commodity
prices, the government might become even more
interventionist and embark on another "one-off" like
the Yukos/Menatep case?

On the other hand, with the country's foreign exchange
reserves recently topping $100 billion and the
stabilization fund rapidly heading toward $20 billion,
Russia has effectively zero net foreign debt. Russia
also has considerable potential to increase oil and
gas production and exports. Those simple facts will be
enough to allow the Yukos/Menatep case to be
conveniently swept aside by the stock market and some
strategic investors. The potential to make money is
simply too good to dwell on the negative implications
of the case.

As for the endgame, there can no longer be any doubt
that, at the very least, the government intends to
gain control of Yukos' largest production unit,
Yuganskneftegaz. The only question is whether it will
proceed to confiscate the remaining production units
as well, effectively destroying Yukos. The key to that
is what happens to Menatep's controlling stake in the
oil major. There is no way that Putin will allow
Khodorkovsky to walk out of jail with any residual
holding in Yukos. If Menatep's equity stake is
successfully confiscated by court action or
voluntarily handed over as part of some plea
bargaining, then Putin will not need to destroy Yukos.


It would then effectively become a state-controlled
company and eventually be absorbed into Russia's
version of Saudi Arabia's Aramco -- which most
probably will be centered around Gazprom.

Christopher Weafer, chief strategist at Alfa Bank,
contributed this comment to The Moscow Times.

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Nu, zayats, pogodi!



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