bne IntelliNews - All bang and no buck at Russia's SPIEF22

2022-06-18 22:18:45 By : Ms. Sibikon Xiamen

The Belarusian security threat – Part II

The Belarusian security threat – Part I

Wargaming opens studios in Belgrade and Warsaw after pulling out of Russia and Belarus

Poor Belarusians are becoming poorer

Putin lashes out at the West during his SPIEF keynote and prepares the population for a long fight

FBK accuses Putin and Miller of using Gazprom as “bottomless purse” in latest scandal report

Ukrainians expect conflict to intensify – RIWI

EU keeps market guessing with designation of Arkady Volozh

Putin lashes out at the West during his SPIEF keynote and prepares the population for a long fight

Ukrainians expect conflict to intensify – RIWI

EWDN: Yet another Ukrainian-founded unicorn: airSlate raises more than $50mn in the US

'Ukraine belongs to the European family,' declare EU premiers

Nordic banks hit by new money laundering scandal in the Baltic states

NEMETHY: The world continues to hurtle towards recession and potentially financial crisis

Estonian coalition negotiations to start between Reform, Isamaa and the Social Democrats

bneGREEN: EU to use €2.4bn of carbon credit cash to fund green projects in CEE

Czechia to appeal €625mn international arbitration award over cancelled blood plasma contract

ASH: Welcome to the new age of inflation

Ukraine set to dominate Czech EU presidency

NEMETHY: The world continues to hurtle towards recession and potentially financial crisis

ASH: Welcome to the new age of inflation

Hungary’s automotive sector sputters in April

NEMETHY: The world continues to hurtle towards recession and potentially financial crisis

Hungary launches probe against Ryanair after airline says it will pass on windfall tax

ASH: Welcome to the new age of inflation

Polish CPI growth confirmed at 13.9% y/y in May as inflation spreads throughout economy

Wargaming opens studios in Belgrade and Warsaw after pulling out of Russia and Belarus

NEMETHY: The world continues to hurtle towards recession and potentially financial crisis

ASH: Welcome to the new age of inflation

Slovak inflation rate hits 22-year high in May

Slovak industrial production down by 9.6% in April

bneGREEN: EU to use €2.4bn of carbon credit cash to fund green projects in CEE

ASH: Welcome to the new age of inflation

bneGREEN: Europeans set higher decarbonisation targets to rescue continent’s security

CONFERENCE CALL: Globsec basks in Putin's humiliation

War and soaring prices take toll on Southeast Europe's listed companies

Albania trails neighbours in auto-parts production but economists see a chance to catch up

COMMENT: Towards sustainable, safe and smart roads in the Western Balkans

Prime minsters of Albania and Montenegro visit Kyiv in show of support

Macron wants ‘accelerated co-operation’ for Moldova as details of EU ‘political community’ proposal leak

COMMENT: Towards sustainable, safe and smart roads in the Western Balkans

High-ranking politicians from Serbia and Bosnia attend ‘Russia’s Davos’ shunned by West

Macron wants ‘accelerated co-operation’ for Moldova as details of EU ‘political community’ proposal leak

MEPs urge EU member states to recognise Kosovo

New majority brings down Bulgaria’s parliament speaker

Bulgaria’s inflation hits new record of 15.6% y/y in May

Bulgaria appeals for German help to clean up suspected heroin route border checkpoint

Bulgarian PM Petkov closer to restoring majority as MPs desert ITN

Bulgarians most sceptical in EU about euro adoption, Eurobarometer poll says

bneGREEN: Europeans set higher decarbonisation targets to rescue continent’s security

bneGREEN: EU to use €2.4bn of carbon credit cash to fund green projects in CEE

CONFERENCE CALL: Globsec basks in Putin's humiliation

COMMENT: Towards sustainable, safe and smart roads in the Western Balkans

Macron wants ‘accelerated co-operation’ for Moldova as details of EU ‘political community’ proposal leak

MEPs urge EU member states to recognise Kosovo

BALKAN BLOG: How to keep the EU accession dream alive

'Ukraine belongs to the European family,' declare EU premiers

Macron wants ‘accelerated co-operation’ for Moldova as details of EU ‘political community’ proposal leak

Moldova’s inflation hits 29% y/y in May

Moldova brings in US federal prosecutor as new anti-corruption chief

COMMENT: Towards sustainable, safe and smart roads in the Western Balkans

Prime minsters of Albania and Montenegro visit Kyiv in show of support

Macron wants ‘accelerated co-operation’ for Moldova as details of EU ‘political community’ proposal leak

BALKAN BLOG: How to keep the EU accession dream alive

COMMENT: Towards sustainable, safe and smart roads in the Western Balkans

Prime minsters of Albania and Montenegro visit Kyiv in show of support

Macron wants ‘accelerated co-operation’ for Moldova as details of EU ‘political community’ proposal leak

North Macedonia’s central bank raises key rate by 0.25 pp for the third time

Bucharest stock exchange indices fall in 2022 as international uncertainty takes its toll

Romania receives gas from first new offshore development in 30 years

Romania’s consumer price inflation reaches 14.5% y/y in May

Bulgarians most sceptical in EU about euro adoption, Eurobarometer poll says

COMMENT: Towards sustainable, safe and smart roads in the Western Balkans

High-ranking politicians from Serbia and Bosnia attend ‘Russia’s Davos’ shunned by West

Macron wants ‘accelerated co-operation’ for Moldova as details of EU ‘political community’ proposal leak

Wargaming opens studios in Belgrade and Warsaw after pulling out of Russia and Belarus

ASH: Welcome to the new age of inflation

Turkey on verge of total bankruptcy says Erdogan’s former economy czar

Turkey’s despair rating score is worse than war-torn Ukraine’s

‘Election mode’ Erdogan ain’t for budging over Finland and Sweden’s Nato applications

COMMENT: Russia will not tolerate the EU's new role in Nagorno-Karabakh peace process

CEE companies weather the COVID-19 crisis

Lukashenko hits out at lack of unity shown by member nations of Russia-led military bloc

After war victory, Azerbaijan keeps increasing military spending

COMMENT: Russia will not tolerate the EU's new role in Nagorno-Karabakh peace process

Iran the winner as Ukraine conflict repercussions divert European trade flows

CEE companies weather the COVID-19 crisis

Azerbaijani activists protest against police brutality in Baku

Macron wants ‘accelerated co-operation’ for Moldova as details of EU ‘political community’ proposal leak

Georgia to take management control of struggling mineral water company Borjomi

Georgian government braces for blocking of EU candidacy

The taming of Georgian culture: Film triumphs vex government

CENTRAL ASIA BLOG: Whisper it, but work on 25-year-old China-Kyrgyzstan-Uzbekistan railway project may finally start

Nuclear deal dealt possible death blow as Iran yanks UN cameras

bneGREEN: BlueSphere Carbon to use blockchain to revolutionise carbon credit trading

ASH: Welcome to the new age of inflation

Tokayev tells Russian TV Kazakhstan won’t break Western sanctions

NEMETHY: The world continues to hurtle towards recession and potentially financial crisis

bneGREEN: UN stresses green issues are key to reducing poverty and boosting sustainability

As Russian economy sputters, UK lures Central Asian labour migrants

After 675 years researchers conclude Kyrgyzstan was the home of the Black Death

CENTRAL ASIA BLOG: Whisper it, but work on 25-year-old China-Kyrgyzstan-Uzbekistan railway project may finally start

China hectors Central Asia to steer clear of big power politics

bneGREEN: Is coal killing us all?

CEE companies weather the COVID-19 crisis

EBRD expects 30% GDP contraction in Ukraine in 2022, lowers emerging Europe projections

Mongolia’s inflation headache goes from bad to worse as thirst for scarce dollars mounts

As Russian economy sputters, UK lures Central Asian labour migrants

China hectors Central Asia to steer clear of big power politics

Explainer | Why Tajikistan’s Pamiris don’t trust their government

CEE companies weather the COVID-19 crisis

China hectors Central Asia to steer clear of big power politics

CEE companies weather the COVID-19 crisis

Uzbekistan’s IT sector on fire and targeting the vast US market

As Russian economy sputters, UK lures Central Asian labour migrants

ASH: Welcome to the new age of inflation

COMMENT: Uzbekistan’s constitutional reforms are for the people

The annual St Petersburg Economic Forum (SPIEF) officially opened on June 15, to great pomp and ceremony. St Petersburg Governor Alexander Beglov and head of the breakaway Donetsk People’s Republic Denis Pushilin fired cannons from the Peter and Paul Fortress to mark the occasion.

The "Russian Davos”, the annual conference that is Russia’s premier investment event, normally attracts thousands of businesspeople from across Europe to hobnob with the Russian elite, but this year a mere 115 Western companies chose to take part.

The panels at SPIEF are usually lively as Russian industrialists take the opportunity to showcase their companies and lobby the government for reforms and investment, but this year the event was gutted of any substance as Russia’s war in Ukraine has thrown the future in doubt. It’s hard to make plans when isolation and stagnation looms.

SPIEF is celebrating its 25th birthday this year. It was set up in 1997 as Russia’s answer to the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, with the intention of attracting investment and business to Russia following the collapse of the Soviet Union. In 2004, Vladimir Putin gave the opening speech at the Forum, and it has been traditional for the president to attend ever since.

Historically, political and business leaders from around the world have flocked to the Forum. In past years, guests have included Chinese premier Xi Jinping, French president Emmanuel Macron and UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres.

This year, Western leaders are steering clear, reluctant to reinforce Russia’s message of economic resilience in the face of sanctions. But a few of the usual attendees from the business world did make the trip, including guests from Canada, Italy, France and the US. But many are worried that attendance may make them a target for future sanctions, and asked the organisers not to print their names on their badges, sources told Bloomberg. Others reportedly plan to leave the conference before the president gives his speech.

In total, the number of attendees expected this year is less than a quarter of last year’s 13,500, with only 90 countries attending, down from 140 last year.

In the past, western corporate leaders like ExxonMobil’s Rex Tillerson and Goldman Sachs’ Lloyd Blankfein attended, but such names are scarce this year.

“For objective reasons it’s difficult to get to St. Petersburg,” Vedomosti quoted Yuri Ushakov, a foreign policy adviser to President Vladimir Putin, as saying Tuesday, apparently referencing a decision by Western countries to cut air links with Russia.

Ushakov added there would be no delegations from “unfriendly” countries, a Russian government designation that covers 48 mostly Western nations.

The first major session of the current St Petersburg forum, dedicated to the "modern challenges and footholds" of the Russian economy, was not very informative, but emotional.

The panel was made up Russia’s economic and financial heavyweights. Central Bank of Russia (CBR) governor Elvia Nabiullina was the most informative of all, supporting the lifting of restrictions on the movement of capital and the reduction of Russian exports.

The rest of the session participants – presidential advisor Maxim Oreshkin, Russian Finance Minister Anton Siluanov and Minister of Economic Development Maxim Reshetnikov – discussed why “it won’t be like before”, kept cheerful and joked a lot, but didn’t actually mention Ukraine at all during the discussion.

Nabiullina unambiguously called for the lifting of domestic restrictions on the movement of capital within Russia that she imposed in the first days of the war, but she gave no details of which restrictions may go first. As the economy stabilises, the governor has already been easing the capital controls she imposed, but the financial system remains under the tight supervision of the central bank and the exchange rate in particularly remains an artificial construct managed by the regulator. Answering journalists' questions after the session, she said that it was impossible to talk about the abolition of restrictions on the sale of cash currency for the meantime. Although she didn’t say so, the central bank is worried that if it eases controls completely then hundreds of billions of dollars will leave Russia as capital flight, further reducing the CBR’s already limited pool of foreign exchange reserves. Nabiullina stressed that trust needs to be returned to the system.

All participants in the panel agreed that the changes in the economy are not temporary, but profound, and that life will not go back to normal. “It won’t be like before, there are no other options,” Oreshkin, an aide to the president, said categorically. In his opinion, one cannot just wait out this crisis and the sooner everyone understands that, the better.

Minister of Economic Development Reshetnikov spoke about the same. According to him, during the pandemic, there was an understanding that after coronavirus (COVID-19) the economy, although it would be different, would generally be similar to the previous one. Now the depth of change is quite different. Therefore the authorities are faced with the task of "buying the time" that is needed for restructuring to take place within the country.

The “change in the external conditions” will be with Russia for “a long time”, if not forever, added Nabiullina. She noted that the international division of labour in Russia is now hurting: "Our exports are at a discount, imports at a premium." Therefore, according to the head of the Central Bank, we need to think about how to reduce exports – to make sure that a significant part of production works for the domestic market. So far, this idea has not come from the economic authorities in this form.

Disagreements among the participants of the first session arose about macroeconomic forecasts. The host, Andrey Makarov, chairman of the State Duma Committee on Budget and Taxes, pointed out that they are very different. For example, Oreshkin predicted a fall in GDP by 5%, and the head of the Accounts Chamber Alexei Kudrin gave an estimate of 12%.

Oreshkin remains optimistic, although this time he did not back it up with numbers: “The thousand-year history of Russia shows that we always cope, we will cope this time too – we will do it, we will do it well. Yes, it will take time, work, efforts – but we will do it! You just need to believe in yourself: We are a strong country, we are strong people, we can solve problems, we can achieve results."

Despite the low key nature of the event and lack of substance, the event is being closely watched, as those that chose to participate are showing their allegiance to what has become a pariah state. The Kremlin can be counted on to closely count the attendees and reward those that have shown solidarity with sanctioned Russia.

US State Department spokesman Ned Price said last week that the US “will not attend the SPIEF in any capacity” and urged other world leaders and businesses to join a boycott. The move was also publicly supported by Finland. But despite the US ban, the president of the American Chamber of Commerce in Russia, Robert Agee, was listed on Wednesday 15 June among confirmed speakers. In the place of Western political bigwigs, officials from Egypt, Turkey and the Central African Republic will be attending, all of which have strong business ties with Russia.

The investment minister for Myanmar’s military government is also attending the forum, as are the head of Venezuela’s central bank and the UAE’s trade minister.

The only heads of state set to attend the forum are Belarus’ Lukashenko, Kazakh President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev and Armenian President Vahagn Khachaturyan. Chinese premier Xi Jinping and Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi will join the plenary panel via video link.

Most notably, the forum is hosting Jamal Nasir Garwalas, a representative of Afghanistan’s Taliban in Moscow. Formally, Russia classifies the Taliban as a terrorist group, but as bne IntelliNews reported, now the Western markets are closed to Russia, the southern route out via Central Asia to the vast Asian markets has gained a new strategic importance last seen a hundred years ago when Russia was a player in the Great Game.

Afghanistan is the key to uncorking Russia’s access to South Asia, but instability and the US occupation has kept that door tightly shut for the last two decades. Following the US abrupt departure last June everything has changed, and both China and Russia are actively engaging with Taliban, hoping to bring peace and commerce to the country.

Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said that the Taliban’s presence at SPIEF is not an indication that Russia will formally recognise the Taliban government, but the ban on the group in Russia is blatantly ignored these days.

Instead, the conference’s high turnout from non-western and non-aligned countries should be seen as an illustration of a trend in Russian foreign policy. It is no coincidence that many of the governments providing high-profile guests – Venezuela, Myanmar, Afghanistan – are also subject to Western sanctions and the event has a “meeting of the non-aligned” aspect to it.

With Western companies pulling out of Russia and Western nations weaning themselves off Russian energy, Putin is hoping to pivot away from the West. As part of the effort to create a coalition of economic partners to rival the G7, Putin is wooing non-aligned countries.

"Foreign investors are not only from the United States and European Union," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told journalists on Tuesday.

Saudi Arabia’s energy minister, Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman, was also spotted at the forum, where he held talks with Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak, according to Reuters.

Putin is not the only leader courting Saudi Arabia, though. US President Joe Biden is also due to go to Riyadh in July, in his first trip to the Middle East since he took up the presidency. Biden is due to discuss a range of topics with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman (MbS), including “means for expanding regional economic and security co-operation… deterring threats from Iran, advancing human rights, and ensuring global energy and food security,” according to White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre.

Following the imposition of the sanctions regime on Russia, the world is being to an extent split into two: those that openly support Russia and those that are against it. Putin is already working hard to shore up his relations with Russia’s friends and woo those that are sitting on the fence. The US is anticipated to do the same and the Middle East in particular is expected to gain from this tension as both sides try to bring it into their camps.

The next big event where countries can vote on their preferences will be the G20 meeting in Indonesia this November, where Putin plans to participate in person.

In the midst of this geopolitical tug-of-war, SPIEF appears to be seen by Putin as another opportunity to attract the investment and support of countries in the Global South. The official topic of this year’s forum is “New Opportunities in a New World.”

With Russia under extreme sanctions since it sent troops into Ukraine on February 24, the true nature of that “new world” may not match the upbeat message which the forum hopes to convey. Other than oblique references to “a difficult time” and “mistakes of the West”, the government officials speaking on the first day made no mention of the conflict in Ukraine. Putin avoided mentioning his “special military operation” entirely in his greeting letter to attendees of the conference.

The forum’s programme contains little mention of Ukraine. However, the Kremlin’s war is set to be discussed as part of a session about “Fake news in the era of globalisation,” attended by Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharov, Russian lawmaker Alexander Khinshtein and pro-Kremlin pranksters Vovan and Lexus, among others.

Meanwhile, Vladimir Putin’s traditional question-and-answer session with executives of major international news organisations will not take place when he attends in person on June 17. Instead, he will meet with the heads of Russian news media and “front-line reporters” from Russia’s military operation in Ukraine, according to Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov.

Other sessions will cover topics such as protecting “national media sovereignty” and boosting consumer and business patriotism in import substitution efforts.

Putin’s traditional speech is scheduled to take place at the SPIEF plenary session on June 17 and will be very closely watched. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told journalists that this “extremely important” address will focus on “anti-Russian sanctions.” Nearly 1,000 foreign companies have curtailed operations in Russia since the start of the invasion of Ukraine, according to data published by the Yale School of Management.

The impact of the sanctions can also be felt outside the conference room. Foreign visitors were told to bring cash, because Mastercard and Visa bank cards issued outside Russia no longer work there.

For Russia, forging an economic alliance with some of the guests in attendance is more important than ever. As presidential adviser Maxim Oreshkin was keen to stress, Russia should not expect things to revert to how they were before the pandemic – and before the war. “It simply won’t be how it was before. There’s no other way of putting it.”

Register here to continue reading this article and 8 more for free or purchase 12 months full website access

Register to read the bne monthly magazine for free:

Password could contain only a-z0-9\+*?[^]$(){}=!<>|:-_ characters and have 8-20 symbols length.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Take a trial of IntelliNews PRO, a premium daily news service aimed at professional investors that covers business, economics, finance and politics of Emerging Europe

Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply

Have a question? Email sales@intellinews.com

Please complete your registration by confirming your email address.

A confirmation email has been sent to the email address you provided.

Email field can't be empty.

No user with this email address.

A confirmation email has been sent to the email address you provided.

Access recovery request has expired, or you are using the wrong recovery token. Please, try again.

Access recover request has expired. Please, try again.

To continue viewing our content you need to complete the registration process.

Please look for an email that was sent to with the subject line "Confirmation bne IntelliNews access". This email will have instructions on how to complete registration process. Please check in your "Junk" folder in case this communication was misdirected in your email system.

If you have any questions please contact us at sales@intellinews.com

Sorry, but you have used all your free articles fro this month for bne IntelliNews. Subscribe to continue reading for only $119 per year.

For the meantime we are also offering a free subscription to bne's digital weekly newspaper to subscribers to the online package.

Click here for more subscription options, including to the print version of our flagship monthly magazine:

Take a trial to our premium daily news service aimed at professional investors that covers the 30 countries of emerging Europe:

For any other enquiries about our products or corporate discounts please contact us at sales@intellinews.com

If you no longer wish to receive our emails, unsubscribe here.

Take a trial to our premium daily news service aimed at professional investors that covers the 30 countries of emerging Europe:

For any other enquiries about our products or corporate discounts please contact us at sales@intellinews.com