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Strategies & Market Trends : Investment in Russia and Eastern Europe -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Z Analyzer who wrote (1114)12/19/2000 10:49:34 PM
From: CIMA  Respond to of 1301
 
Putin Moving to Control Russia on All Political Levels

Summary

In the coming months, the Russian Duma will vote on legislation
that would redefine the legal concept of a political party. Under
this new legislation, most of the smaller political parties would
disappear or be absorbed into larger parties, leaving the Unity
Party and the Communist Party as the two largest parties in
politics. Once the law passes, the Unity Party, backed by
President Vladimir Putin, will increase control of politics at
the local and the federal levels.

Analysis

Russia's Central Elections Commission is pressing the Duma to
pass a bill that would redefine the terms and establishment of a
political party in Russia. According to the Moscow Times, this
new law would take effect in two years and reduce the existing
number of political groups by more than 90 percent, leaving only
major players at the local and federal levels.

The law will probably pass through the Duma, as the large
political parties - namely the Communist Party and the Unity
Party - control the majority of parliamentary seats and have the
most to gain. Both parties originally banded together as a
majority coalition in December 1999, but in reality they often
clash over economic issues, such as passing the 2001 budget.
Because neither party controls a majority of parliament's 450
seats, they count on the smaller parties' support, on an issue-
by-issue basis, to pass legislation through the Duma.

Though both parties will gain supporters, the Unity Party will
probably gain the most, therefore building a strong party
infrastructure from the local level to the federal level. Under
the new law, a political party would need at least 10,000
registered members nationwide, with at least 100 registered
members at branch offices in at least 45 of Russia's 89 regions.
Through this infrastructure, the Unity Party, controlled largely
by President Vladimir Putin, will secure a stronghold over
Russian politics at every level.

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To: Z Analyzer who wrote (1114)12/21/2000 8:25:34 PM
From: CIMA  Respond to of 1301
 
Putin Plans on Attack on Deepening Demographic Decline

stratfor.com

SUMMARY

Russian President Vladimir Putin has proposed solving the
country's demographic crisis by attracting Russians residing
elsewhere in the former Soviet Union to return to Russia. If
implemented, the plan - still under development - may help stem
Russia's demographic decline and improve its short-term economic
prospects. But over the long term, it would also carry
significant economic costs for - and heighten tensions between -
Russia and the other states of the former Soviet Union. And it
will do little to stop the shrinking of Russia's population.

ANALYSIS

On Nov. 17, during a visit to sparsely populated Siberia, Russian
President Vladimir Putin announced his intention to promote the
resettlement of ethnic Russians residing in the states of the
former Soviet Union to the Russian Far East. His objective is to
combat the country's demographic decline.

In April, Stratfor reported Russia's population would probably
drop below 90 million by 2050 due to various economic and
environmental factors. New statistics portend a deepening crisis.
In May, Meditsinskaya Gazeta, a medical journal, stated that only
10 percent of Russian births were healthy. In June, the State
Statistics Committee reported alcohol-related deaths had
increased by 43 percent over the previous year. A study released
that same month by Moscow's Family Research Institute discovered
that the deaths of two-thirds of men aged 20 to 55 were alcohol
related. Russia averages 146 suicides daily, and has a murder
rate four times that of the United States. In October, the State
Statistics Committee estimated that 1 million Russians become
invalids each year, and Dec. 4, Deputy Prime Minister Valentina
Matviyenko revealed that 7 percent of population - over 10
million people - were already physically handicapped.

Russia also has the dubious distinction of having the highest
death rate and lowest birth rate of any large country. Moreover,
Russia's HIV infection rate has soared in recent years, and the
Duma has voted to release some 200,000 tubercular prisoners,
raising the possibility that Russian mortality rates could
increase further.

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To: Z Analyzer who wrote (1114)12/31/2000 4:46:33 PM
From: CIMA  Respond to of 1301
 
Russia and Germany are considering converting a large chunk of
Russia's $14 billion debt to Germany into equity stakes in
Russian companies, which would make Germany a major shareholder
in Russian industry. The deal will represent an important move in
forging a close geopolitical partnership between Germany and
Russia. This may help Russia's revival, and Germany could emerge
as the leader of a united Europe with Russia on its side. Such a
development would significantly weaken U.S. influence in Europe
while dramatically strengthening Germany and Russia and helping
them to advance to the front stage of world geopolitics.

Analysis

Germany and Russia are forging an economic deal that, if it
succeeds, may shift the balance of European power. Werner Muller,
German economic minister, and German Gref, Russian minister of
economic development and trade, met in Berlin Dec. 12 to debate
details of a plan to exchange Russian debt for German equity in
Russian companies.

The two sides have agreed in principle to swap a large share of
Russia's $14 billion debt, The Times reported Dec. 13. One option
they are considering is giving to Germany a significantly larger
share in Gazprom, Russia's gigantic gas export monopoly.
Germany's Ruhrgas now holds 4 percent.

Obtaining several billion dollars worth of stakes in Russian
enterprises would make Germany a major shareholder in Russian
industry, giving Berlin a stronger voice in Moscow. In addition,
it would further tie Berlin's interests to economic and political
stability in Russia. Russia already supplies about 35 percent of
Germany's gas needs.

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"I was happy to pay the new subscription charge for continued
access to your material given the high quality...In fact,
I've quoted you several times in a report recently published
by (my consulting firm)." D.A.

"I teach geography and international relations at the college
level. Your site is one of the most excellent resources for
students and teachers alike. My compliments on the site."
J.B.

"I subscribe to numerous publications including the
Economist, the National Interest and Foreign Affairs, and yet
not one provides cogent analysis of today's events as well as
you do." M.U.

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To: Z Analyzer who wrote (1114)1/18/2001 11:44:26 PM
From: CIMA  Respond to of 1301
 
Russia is sending two large and impressive anti-submarine
warships from the Pacific Fleet on an extended patrol that
includes port calls in India and Vietnam. Russia's choice of ship
is telling. Although they are warships, the vessels pose a
limited threat to commercial shipping unlike the increasing
multinational submarine threat in the South China Sea. Russia
hopes to reassure its allies in the region it can provide useful
military assistance and show a Russian military presence.

Analysis

Russia's Pacific Fleet returned to extended naval operations with
the Jan.15 sailing of two Udaloy class destroyers to India and
Vietnam. The choice of the Admiral Vinogradov and Admiral
Panteleyev, large anti-submarine warfare ships, demonstrates
Russian military capability and a willingness to provide
assistance in the vital shipping lanes of Southeast Asia.

Russia's extended naval journey is significant in that it marks
the Pacific Fleet's first long-term mission in the last five
years, Reuters reported Jan. 15. Until now, the Pacific Fleet has
been unable to conduct extended operations because of chronic
cash shortages.

Russia had a choice of ships to send on the voyage. The Pacific
Fleet, formerly comprised more than 100 submarines and surface
ships, now has a much-reduced capability. The fleet maintains
surface warships, among them several Sovremenny class destroyers,
powerful warships armed with supersonic anti-ship missiles.

*********** TO READ THE REST OF THIS ARTICLE CLICK HERE ***********
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To: Z Analyzer who wrote (1114)2/10/2001 12:04:22 AM
From: CIMA  Respond to of 1301
 
Russian President Vladimir Putin traveled to Austria this week
with two items on his agenda - reinforcing Russia's economic
relations with Austria and persuading Austria to retain its
neutral status. Central to both missions was a Russian offer to
trade MiG-29 jet fighters to Austria in exchange for relief of
Russian debt to Vienna. The offer was rejected, dealing a serious
setback to Russia's strategy for relations with Europe. Domestic
political pressure, time and budgetary constraints, however,
could force Austria to reconsider Russia's offer, in turn,
threatening NATO expansion and cohesion.

Analysis

Russian President Vladimir Putin concluded the working portion of
his visit to Austria on Feb. 9, having almost completely failed
to achieve his two major objectives. First, Putin was attempting
to reinforce economic ties between Russia and Austria. Second,
Putin sought to persuade Austrian leaders to retain the country's
neutral status and refrain from NATO membership. Serving both
initiatives was a Russian proposal to offer MiG-29 fighter jets
as partial payment of Russia's $2.84 billion debt to Vienna, an
offer that, if accepted, would have hampered any future Austrian
accession to NATO.

But the MiG offer was shot down before Putin's arrival, the
victim of aggressive opposition lobbying from the United States,
Britain and Sweden. In the end, Putin was forced to reaffirm
publicly that Russia would fulfill its international debt
obligations and to acknowledge that Austria's neutrality and
membership in international organizations were matters for
Austria to decide. Chastened, Putin left Vienna with only a
handful of insubstantial economic cooperation agreements.

While strategically and economically painful, Russia's setback on
the MiG proposal is not yet terminal. The Russian jets-for-debt
proposal and competing European and U.S. offers will still face
intense debate within the Austrian populace and parliament. The
majority of Austrians do not share their government's commitment
to eventual NATO membership, and budgetary and political concerns
could, in the end, make Russia's offer too attractive to refuse.

*********** TO READ THE REST OF THIS ARTICLE CLICK HERE ***********
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To: Z Analyzer who wrote (1114)4/30/2001 4:59:31 PM
From: CIMA  Respond to of 1301
 
EURO-SPEAK - another benefit of centralised planning.

The European Commission has announced an agreement whereby English
will be the official language of the EU rather than German, which was
the other possibility. As part of the negotiations, Her Majesty's
Government conceded that English spelling had some room for
improvement and has accepted a 5 year phase-in plan that would be
known as "Euro-English".

In the first year, "s" will replace the soft "c". Sertainly this will
make the sivil servants jump with joy. The hard "c" will be dropped
in favour of the "k". This would klear up konfusion and keyboards kan
have 1 less letter.

There will be growing publik enthusiasm in the sekond year, when the
troublesome "ph" will be replased with "f". This will make words
like "fotograf" 20% shorter.

In the 3rd year publik akseptanse of the new spelling kan be
ekspekted to reach the stage where more komplikated changes are
possible. Governments will enkorage the removal of double letters,
which have always ben a deterent to akurate speling. Also, al wil
agre that the horible mes of the silent "e" in the language is
disgraseful, and it should go away.

By the fourth year peopl wil be reseptiv to steps such as replasing
"th" with "z'" and "w" with "v". During ze fifz year, ze unesesary
"o" kan be dropd from vords kontaining "ou" and similar changes vud
of kors be aplid to ozer kombinations of leters.

After zis fifz yer, ve vil hav a reli sensibl riten styl. Zer vil be
no mor trubl or difikultis and evrivun vil find it ezi to understand
each ozer.

Ze drem vil finali kum tru!

And zen ve vil tak over ze vorld!!

(And al hy skool kids wil get strait A's for speling)
--
"Not everything that counts can be counted, and not everything that
can be counted counts."
- sign over Albert Einstein's desk at Princeton



To: Z Analyzer who wrote (1114)11/5/2001 11:49:10 PM
From: CIMA  Respond to of 1301
 
Moscow Gets New Tool for Money Monitoring

November 5, 2001

Summary

Russian President Vladimir Putin has created a financial intelligence agency to combat money laundering. The agency will help clean up Russia's often questionable financial sector, solidify Moscow's growing cooperation with the United States and Europe and empower the Kremlin to repatriate much of the money oligarchs have squirreled away abroad.

Analysis

Russian President Vladimir Putin on Oct. 31 created a financial intelligence agency, dubbed the Financial Monitoring Committee, to fight money laundering. The office will be responsible for investigating financial crimes -- making it an ideal tool for use against terrorists and oligarchs.

As a result, the new agency could do much to improve Putin's standing both at home and in the West. Perhaps most important, the FMC could get Russia removed from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development's black list of money-laundering states.

Although the FMC will not turn Russia into an investor's dream, it should help prune much of the uncertainty and corruption that hinders economic activity.

The agency, to be led by Deputy Finance Minister Viktor Zubkov, is under the authority of the powerful Finance Ministry. Four hundred auditors will begin work Feb. 1, the same day a new package of laws combating dirty financial practices takes effect.

The FMC is a coup for Putin's efforts to ingratiate himself with the West. During the past decade, Russia has been known as one of the world's most notorious money-laundering centers. The oligarchs used their political pull to create loopholes in financial laws so they could evade taxes and international financial-monitoring bodies. Using influence, the oligarchs funneled much of Russia's capital flight-- estimated at $20 billion annually by the State Statistics Committee -- into safe havens abroad.

Related Analysis:

Putin's Quest for the West

U.S. Campaign Presents Benefits for Russia



To: Z Analyzer who wrote (1114)11/21/2001 2:55:32 AM
From: CIMA  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1301
 
From Russia with love 2001-11-21

A troika of telecom stocks that are well-positioned for current trends and gaining analyst esteem.



by Ben Mattlin, equity research columnist

When shares of Russian-based telecom companies start earning a measure of analyst esteem, savvy investors owe it to themselves to take a further look.

To be sure, these three Russian telcos haven’t yet attained analysts’ highest rating, but quite surprisingly—and seemingly out of nowhere—each has an average rating better than a neutral 3, and one of them has moved up to an average rating of 2 ("buy"). What gives?

Of course, emerging markets like Russia may represent risky business for the unitiated. But for investors looking for rapid growth and willing to take volatility, they can also be terrific opportunities.

Companies mentioned in this article
Vimpel Communications (VIP)
Mobile TeleSystems (MBT)
Golden Telecom (GLDN)



The macro environment in Russia seems to be in genuine growth mode, and its apparent economic revival is being driven by a vast population (150 million) subscribing to wireless services at a staggering rate—some bulls forecast better than 50 percent growth per year for the next five years.

At the same time, there’s considerable consolidation, with Russian regional telecom carriers buying each other up and/or being taken over by larger, Moscow-based competitors. J.P. Morgan recently dubbed the land of borscht and blintzes a "telecoms heavyweight."

So far, the biggest beneficiary of these trends is Vimpel Communications (VIP), a Moscow-based wireless telecom provider which recently saw its average analyst rating move up to 2 ("buy"). In its home base of Moscow, the company has already grown from 2 percent of the mobile market in late-1998 to 13 percent a year ago—the most recent figure available—while its wireless subscriber base outside Moscow is expected to grow by 67 percent annually for the next five years.

Reports for further inquiry
ValuEngine Quantitative Report for VIP: Forecasts, valuations, ValuEngine ratings, comparables, quantitative summary and financials
Strong Turnaround In A Weak Market
Investment Review — Golden Telecom, Inc.



Encouraged by strong financial gains in the first half of this year, VimpelCom fans point to its highly regarded brand-name and proven management team.

In addition, analysts who follow VimpelCom expect a dramatic jump in earnings this year. A Nov. 17 Multex Investment Review found that the consensus estimate for 2001 is earnings of 59 cents per share; last year, the company posted a per-share loss of $1.93. Moreover, next year the company is expected to bring in $1.07 per share.

Close behind is wireless carrier Mobile TeleSystems (MBT), which has an average analyst rating of 2.5. Also based in Moscow, it has been expanding aggressively in other regions of Russia, largely through acquisitions.Like VimpelCom, Mobile TeleSystems posted a good first half of the year, especially because of stronger than expected subscriber growth, which in turn gives it better bargaining leverage when negotiating for lower connection rates. It currently holds licenses for 43 of the country’s 89 regions, and operates in 21 of them so far.

Buying up regional carriers takes cash, naturally, and though Mobile TeleSystems boasted nearly 50 percent sales growth last year, it is still struggling to maintain profitability. Nevertheless, Wall Street foresees an earnings-per-share (EPS) increase of 46 percent this year to $1.46, and another 45 percent jump next year to $2.11, according to a Multex Investment Review of Nov. 17.

The stock reached a new high of $32.40 on Nov. 13, but many observers argue that its true worth has not yet been fully appreciated by the market. They point out that it has stolen not just market share but market leadership from VimpelCom, growing from a 41-percent share of Moscow’s wireless customers in 1999 to a 56 percent share in the second quarter this year. What’s more, in many of the non-Moscow regions it has the first-mover advantage.

This enviable situation has given the company a sufficiently healthy balance sheet to fund future acquisitions. But critics argue that the company’s high churn rate makes it a risky investment. Mobile TeleSystems’ own figures show that the number of disconnections as a proportion of net new subscribers is rising.

Finally, another Russian consolidator is Golden Telecom (GLDN), a facilities-based competitive local exchange carrier (CLEC) offering domestic and international wireline and wireless services as well as data and Internet connectivity primarily to Russian businesses; it also operates a fiber-optic and satellite-based network.

Its third-quarter results show that it is very well positioned to benefit from broad-based telecom trends in Russia, even though it’s not yet profitable. Led by data and Internet proceeds, total revenue for the quarter surged by 26 percent over the corresponding period last year. Earnings before interest, taxation, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) vaulted by 80 percent year-over-year and 45 percent sequentially.

Still, EPS was a net loss of 8 cents—but that was an improvement from the previous year’s deficit of 12 cents per share. Analysts now anticipate 2001 will show a loss of 20 cents per share, which is much better than last year’s per-share loss of 43 cents. The shortfall is expected to dwindle even further next year, to a loss of 13 cents per share.

Golden Telecom’s average analyst rating is currently 2.5, but some advocates insist that the shares are undervalued by some 65 percent—a discrepancy of which investors will eventually take note, analysts say, as management sharpens its focus on reducing costs and attaining profitability.

If that’s the case, smart investors should buy shares now, and take advantage of the first-mover advantage.