Vladimir Putin Announces Foreign Investment Has Reached $36 Bln
Published: November 30, 2011 (Issue # 1685)
MOSCOW — Foreign direct investment in Russia reached $36 billion in the first 10 months of the year, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said Monday during a meeting of the government’s commission on foreign investment, citing the Central Bank.
Last year the amount of foreign investment for the same period was $32.2 billion, Putin said.
During its final meeting of the year, the commission approved eight foreign investment requests, Federal Anti-Monopoly Service deputy director Andrei Tsyganov said.
French IT company Atos gained approval to provide services for the 2014 Olympics and the 2018 football World Cup. Atos will invest more than 1.5 billion rubles ($48 million) in the Russian economy by 2014.
Putin said it was a “smart” decision by Atos, adding that the nation needs more of such investments.
The commission approved an investment from the European Bank of Reconstruction and Development, or EBRD, in Moscow firm Belaya Dacha Trading to develop existing and new facilities for packaged salad processing. The EBRD’s purchase of shares in several Russian financial services companies was also approved.
Other smaller deals blessed by the commission include foreign investment in cobalt mining and the tire industry. A review of Polyus Gold’s plan to change its registration to Britain was delayed and will be conducted next year, Tsyganov said.
Polyus, part-owned by Mikhail Prokhorov, is seeking a premium listing on London’s prestigious FTSE Index, but it must first register as a legal entity in Britain before it can qualify.
Several amendments to federal laws that ease foreign investment will come into effect in 2012.
Amendments include lifting government control from investment deals where international organizations such as the EBRD and the International Finance Corporation are investors. Another amendment exempts foreign companies from getting government permission to buy stocks in Russian oil, gas or mining companies if the total share remains under 25 percent.
The government’s objective is to create a favorable environment for foreign companies to invest in Russia, in areas such as food, medicine, banking and mining, Tsyganov said.
The liberalization in investment will be good for competition, he added.
“Russian markets have always been open in some way for international investment,” Tsyganov said. “For more than a decade we have lived in strict competition with foreign entrepreneurs who either invest in Russia or sell their services and products on the Russian market.”
Business will work under the new laws starting next year. The commission has approved 128 of 136 investment proposals since its creation in 2008, Tsyganov said.