Russian Oligarch, Ex-Cabinet Minister Invested in Telegram’s ICO, Court Filing Says
A Russian oligarch, a former cabinet minister and the COO of
German fintech company Wirecard invested in Telegram’s $1.7 billion initial
coin offering (ICO), according to a previously unreported court document.
Tycoon Roman Abramovich and former Minister of Open
Government Affairs Mikhail Abyzov bought tokens, known as grams, via offshore
funds, the document says.
These big names' involvement is the latest twist in the case
brought against Telegram by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC),
which claims the messaging app provider violated securities laws by failing to
register its 2018 token sale.
The names, along with the amounts each of them invested,
were listed in an attachment to an expert report by Stephen McKeon, a
University of Oregon professor who was hired by Telegram to write an analysis
of the Telegram Open Network (TON) blockchain project.
The report was filed by the SEC with the U.S. District Court
of the Southern District of New York in January but received little notice. It
contains a number of exhibits, including the “List of Potential Validators at
Launch (Purchasers in Round 2).”
The second round, known as Stage A, was completed in March
2018 and raised Telegram another $850 million on top of the same amount raised
in the first round, or pre-sale. The purchasers’ names have been largely kept
secret, and the investors were prohibited from talking publicly about their
participation.
Asked by CoinDesk about the source of the list attached to
his report, McKeon declined to respond.
Soccer tycoon
The list includes a British Virgin Islands-based fund called
Norma Investments Limited, controlled by Abramovich, an industrial tycoon and
the owner of the Chelsea soccer club. According to the document, Norma invested
$10 million in TON during the second round.
Rumors of Abramovich’s participation in TON have been
circulating since the end of the first round. However, the billionaire himself
never confirmed his involvement. John Mann, the spokesperson for Abramovich’s
investment firm Millhouse, declined to comment.
Abramovich mostly makes headlines for his soccer ties, but
he also was famously sued by his former partner, now deceased Russian oligarch
Boris Berezovsky, who claimed Abramovich “intimidated” him into selling his
shares in the Russian oil company Sibneft by leveraging his relationship with
the Russian authorities. Abramovich denied the allegations. Berezovsky lost the
case.
Another fund, Russia-based Larnabel Ventures, invested $15
million in TON during the second round, the document says. The fund belongs to
the Gutseriyev family. The head of the family, Mikhail Gutseriyev, made his
wealth in the oil industry and founded the oil corporation Safmar.
His son Said Gutseriev, also a billionaire, who manages
Larnabel Ventures, followed his father’s lead in the oil industry but also
dipped his toe in a more modern business: In 2019, he invested in Currency.com,
the first legal crypto exchange in Belarus founded after the country adopted
crypto regulations in late 2018.
Later last year, a Russian media outlet reported that the
Gutseriyev family business was under investigation for alleged oil smuggling.
Safmar’s press office did not answer CoinDesk’s request for
comment by press time.
Another notable name on the list is Batios Holdings Limited,
a BVI-registered fund where former government minister Abyzov is a director,
according to the SEC database. His relation to Batios became public after
Russian law enforcement brought an embezzlement case against Abyzov in 2018.
Abyzov, who used to be responsible for the digitization of
the government services, has been in jail since March 2019. He ended his
government career in May 2018, after the Telegram ICO took place. Abyzov’s
legal representative didn’t respond to CoinDesk’s request for comment.
Fintech exec
Another notable investor listed in the document is Jan
Marsalek, chief operating officer at German payment service Wirecard. According
to the document, he invested $7 million in the second round of the TON token
sale.
Last year, Wirecard partnered with TON Labs, the tech
startup affiliated with TON investors, which helped Telegram work on the test
version of its blockchain since March 2019. Wirecard and TON Labs agreed “to develop a joint digital financial
services, payments and banking platform,” Wirecard announced last April.
The company did not answer CoinDesk’s questions about this
partnership or Marsalek’s investment by press time. Wirecard's accounting
practices came under scrutiny in a Financial Times investigation last year; the
company has sued the newspaper.
Previously, two Russian millionaires publicly announced they
invested in TON: the founder of the e-payment company Qiwi, Sergey Solonin, and
David Yakobashvili, a co-founder of soft drink company Wimm-Bill-Dann, acquired
by PepsiCo in 2010.
Solonin said he put $17 million in TON and Yakobashvili said
he invested $10 million. However, according to an exhibit in McKeon's report,
Yakobashvili’s total investment might be five times larger – $50 million, which
would make him one of the largest single holders of TON’s yet-to-be-issued
tokens.
As previously reported, Telegram’s oversubscribed token sale
attracted prominent U.S. venture funds Kleiner Perkins, Benchmark, Sequoia,
Lightspeed, Redpoint, Draper Dragon and Fortress.
The live version of the network was scheduled to launch in
October 2019, but the SEC sued Telegram several weeks before the deadline.
After the months of exchanging legal papers, the sides met in court on Feb. 19.
The judge promised to rule on the case before April 30 – the
new deadline for the TON mainnet launch agreed upon by investors in
October. In the meantime, Telegram kept
working on TON all through the court battle: in November, it released a test
crypto wallet, in February, a technical paper on the TON consensus protocol was
published. Telegram also published the tech documentation for TON DNS, a
service for running websites in the TON ecosystem.
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