http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601109&sid=aIAWDrA4RSTQ&refer=news

Abramovich, Deripaska, Oligarchs Lose $230 Billion (Update1)

By Yuriy Humber, Greg Walters and Maria Kolesnikova

Oct. 10 (Bloomberg) -- Russian billionaires from aluminum magnate Oleg 
Deripaska to soccer-club owner Roman Abramovich lost more than $230 
billion in five months during the nation's worst financial crisis since 
the 1998 default on its debt.

The combined wealth of Forbes magazine's 25 richest Russians tumbled 62 
percent between May 19 and Oct. 6, based on the equity value of traded 
companies and analysts' estimates of closely held assets they own. The 
loss is four times larger than the fortune of the world's wealthiest 
man, Warren Buffett.

Moscow's benchmark Micex stock index declined 61 percent since its peak 
in May. The global credit seizure, war with Georgia and falling 
commodity prices led foreign investors to pull $74 billion out of Russia 
since the early August, according to BNP Paribas SA. While Russia's 1998 
default and devaluation of the ruble eradicated savings for most of the 
population, this year's losses are wiping out its richest citizens' 
fortunes.

``There was a massive transfer of wealth into the hands of the oligarchs 
in 1998,'' said Mark Mobius, executive chairman of Templeton Asset 
Management Ltd., which has about $30 billion in emerging market stocks. 
``Now it's going the other way.''

United Co. Rusal's Deripaska, 40, the richest Russian on the list, lost 
more than $16 billion and in the past week ceded stakes in Hochtief AG 
and Magna International Inc. Chelsea FC owner and Evraz Group SA 
shareholder Abramovich, 41, lost $20 billion, based on assets excluding 
property and cash.

Lisin's Losses

The biggest loser has been Vladimir Lisin, 52, an avid hunter and head 
of Russia's Shooting Club, whose 85 percent stake in OAO Novolipetsk 
Steel lost $22 billion in value in the period.

Novolipetsk rival Evraz declined 83 percent, shrinking 49- year-old 
founder Alexander Ambramov's fortune to $2.2 billion from $13.4 billion. 
Russia's biggest steelmaker, OAO Severstal, also fell, cutting the 
wealth of chief executive officer and majority owner Alexei Mordashov, 
43, to $5.3 billion.

``They should take us all off the Forbes list,'' said Alexander Lebedev, 
ranked 39th by the magazine in May with $3.1 billion of wealth. Lebedev, 
49, who owns 30 percent of state-run airline OAO Aeroflot, said in an 
interview on Sept. 23 that ``silly'' rhetoric by the Kremlin over the 
conflict in Georgia was responsible for 40 percent of the stock market's 
drop in August.

Lukoil, Alfa

OAO Lukoil Chief Executive Officer Vagit Alekperov, 58, saw his 20 
percent stake in Russia's second-biggest oil producer decline to $7.2 
billion from $19.5 billion. The fortune of Alekperov deputy Leonid 
Fedun, 52, declined to $3 billion from $8.4 billion. Both men have said 
they will continue to buy more Lukoil shares.

Dmitry Rybolovlev, 41, who controls OAO Uralkali and owns 20 percent of 
OAO Silvinit, the country's only potash producers, lost about $12.8 
billion, leaving him with $4.1 billion.

Alfa Group partners Mikhail Fridman, 44, German Khan, 46, and Alexei 
Kousmichoff, 45, ranked seventh, 10th and 17th, respectively, lost at 
least a combined $12.1 billion.

Alfa's shareholdings include BP Plc's Russian oil venture TNK-BP, 
mobile-phone operators OAO VimpelCom and Turkey's Turkcell Iletisim 
Hizmetleri AS, supermarket chain X5 Retail Group and television 
broadcaster CTC Media Inc.

Spokespeople for companies including Deripaska's Basic Element, Evraz, 
Nikolai Tsvetkov's UralSib Financial Corp. and Rybolovlev's Uralkali 
declined to comment on the losses.

Cashing Out

At least one of Russia's wealthiest got out in time.

Mikhail Prokhorov, 43, sold his 25 percent stake in OAO GMK Norilsk 
Nickel to Deripaska's Rusal for an undisclosed amount in April, just 
before nickel prices began to slump. The value of that stake plummeted 
from $13 billion on April 24 to $3.38 billion on Oct. 6.

Prokhorov received $7 billion in cash as part of the Norilsk 
transaction, the Kommersant and Vedomosti newspapers reported then, 
citing unidentified people familiar with the deal.

``Are you criticizing me for feasting amid the Black Death,'' Prokhorov 
joked with reporters in Moscow on Sept. 30, after buying half of 
Renaissance Capital for $500 million. That was less than a quarter of 
the value the investment bank had a year ago when VTB Group sought to 
take it over, according to a Vedemosti report. ``Crisis time is a peak 
for opportunities,'' Prokhorov said. ``An absolute peak.''

Trading Delayed

Russia's Micex and RTS stock exchanges delayed the opening of trading 
today on orders of the market regulator. It was unclear when trading 
would start, a spokesman for Micex said. The RTS won't resume stock 
trading until ``further notice,'' the bourse wrote in an e-mailed statement.

``You can now buy the free float of the entire Russian energy sector 
with the market cap of Coca-Cola, and still have change to buy all the 
Russian banks,'' Merrill Lynch & Co. emerging markets equity strategist 
Michael Hartnett said in a note to clients today.

The unprecedented loss of wealth may set the stage for a new round of 
asset redistribution, said Pavel Teplukhin, president of Troika Dialog 
Asset Management in Moscow.

``We've seen quite a significant inflow of fresh money by our wealthy 
individuals to acquire at these very attractive levels that we haven't 
seen since 2003, 2004,'' Teplukhin said in a Bloomberg Television 
interview on Oct. 9, a day the Micex Index climbed 9.8 percent.

Next Round

The next round of wealth building may be the most intense yet, according 
to Renaissance Capital. The first came between 1995 and 1998 as Russia's 
first president, the late Boris Yeltsin, agreed to sell stakes in the 
nation's biggest industrial assets in return for loans from bankers 
including Potanin, who helped organize the state bailout.

``It will be a game with bigger stakes than in early 1990s 
privatizations and the redistribution after the 1998 crisis,'' said 
David Aserkoff, chief strategist for Russia at Moscow-based Renaissance 
Capital.

``Oligarchs with cash will be able to use their knowledge of the 
business and political landscape to find the next billions,'' Aserkoff 
said in a research report on Oct. 6.

``The market will grow back,'' billionaire Viktor Vekselberg, 51, one of 
BP Plc's four partners in oil company TNK-BP and founder of Renova 
Group, told reporters yesterday. ``The only issue is when. I don't think 
it will be soon.''

To contact the reporters on this story: Yuriy Humber in Moscow at 
[Е-ПОШТА 
ЗАШТИЋЕНА]; Greg Walters 
in Moscow [Е-ПОШТА 
ЗАШТИЋЕНА]; 
Maria Kolesnikova in Moscow at [Е-ПОШТА 
ЗАШТИЋЕНА]
Last Updated: October 10, 2008 05:44 EDT

Одговори путем е-поште