Russia Bans Dealing in Capital of 45 Foreign-Owned Banks or Banking Units
Russia on Wednesday banned dealings in the shares or share
capital of 45 banks or banking units, all either owned by parties in countries
that Russia terms "unfriendly" or owned through foreign capital.
Western countries and allies, including Japan, have piled
financial restrictions on Russia since it sent troops into Ukraine in late
February. Moscow retaliated with obstacles for Western businesses and their
allies leaving Russia, and in some cases seized their assets.
The list followed a decree issued on Aug. 5 by President
Vladimir Putin banning dealings in stakes in the financial and energy sectors
owned by parties in "unfriendly" countries unless specific permission
was given.
The list, published on Wednesday, included Russian units of
Intesa, Credit Suisse, Raiffeisen, Citi, OTP bank and UniCredit Bank, as
well as the Russian Yandex-Bank and Ozon-Bank.
Citi, the largest Wall Street bank to have a presence in
Russia with an exposure of $8 billion, plans to wind down nearly all of the
institutional banking services as it is unable to sell the business amid the
recent sanctions-related laws.
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