Another Big Win For Putin!!!

88m3

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Putin wants the billionaires to repatriate their money....i assumed he was an oil billionaire....hes a nickel billionaire...check out the shythole they produce nickel in (norilsk)

:dead:

the rampant crime in Russia is just astounding...I started reading about Prokhorov and ended up reading about the Magnitsky Affair.

It isn't a country, it's a criminal enterprise.
 

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Contracts all fukked up... :mjlol:










Putin's Closest Ally Wants Closer Ties To The West

  • JAN. 15, 2015, 10:13 AM
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belarus-alexander-lukashenko-putin-2.jpg
RIA Novosti/REUTERSBelarus' President Alyaksandr Lukashenka
See Also

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Belarusian President Alyaksandr Lukashenka has vowed to improve ties with the West, which are badly strained, and warned Russia not to oppose the effort.

Speaking to parliament on January 15, Lukashenka said his country will be "consistently and purposefully building ties with the EU and United States."

In a dig at Russia, which has been hit with Western sanctions over its interference in Ukraine, Lukashenka said, "We do not resent the fact that Russia currently is undertaking colossal efforts to normalize its relations with the West. Well, then you should not resent this either."

"All sides must calm down and work properly," he said, suggesting that Moscow's deep rift with the West was doing Russia's partners in regional trade and security alliances no good.

At the same time, he promised that Western countries will never "replace" Russia for Belarus, saying that "Belarus has never been a traitor."

Lukashenka has alienated the United States and EU with his intolerance for dissent over 20 years in power, but he often seeks to play Russia and the West off against each other.



Read more: http://www.rferl.org/content/lukash...e-vties-with-west/26795421.html#ixzz3Ov3nfk9P
 

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Putin Just Made A Power Grab For Russia's Private Sector


  • JAN. 15, 2015, 10:03 AM
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putin-grab.jpg
REUTERS/Mikhail Klimentyev/RIA Novosti/Kremlin
See Also

Russia's Downgrade Paints A Horrific Picture Of Economic Collapse

Russian Finance Minister: We'll Lose $45 Billion If Oil Is At $50 In 2015

Russia Just Made A Bold Move To Keep Its Gas Leverage On Europe


Speaking at a fiscal summit on Wednesday, senior members of the Russian government painted a grim picture of the country’s financial future – one that includes across the board spending cuts, a likely downgrade of its public debt to junk status, and, perhaps most ominously, the specter of high-level government officials looking over the shoulder of executives at publicly held companies.

Many of Russia’s largest companies, including energy behemoths Gazprom and Rosneft, were assembled from government owned firms that were privatized in the late 1980s and 1990s.

Because the government retained an ownership stake, many companies had senior Russian officials serving on their boards of directors until fairly recently. They were replaced with much more junior government figures in 2011, when then-Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev directed cabinet ministers and vice premiers to remove themselves from corporate boards as part of an effort to modernize the economy.

No longer.

“Now, we will apparently have to return them,” Economic Development Minister Alexey Ulyukayev announced Wednesday, according to the state-owned media company ITAR-TASS.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has already been pressuring large Russian companies that do business overseas to support the country’s failing currency by converting income earned in foreign currencies to rubles. Now, when the directors of major Russian companies consider their financial strategies, they will have members of Putin’s inner political circle at the table with them.

Consider Treasury Secretary Jack Lew serving on the board of JP Morgan Chase, or Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel on the board of General Electric.

Ulyukayev also said that Russians should expect that their sovereign debt offerings would be downgraded to “junk” status by international ratings agency Standard & Poor’s in coming days.

The new addition to corporate boards comes at the same time that Russian Finance minister Anton Siluanov warned that, with the country facing a loss of as much as $45 billion in revenue this year due to declining oil prices, the government is planning 10 percent across-the-board cuts in spending, targeting virtually everything except the military and some infrastructure projects.

That’s a doubling of the cuts that Putin warned Russians, just last month, they should expect in the coming year.

Worse still, from a fiscal perspective, the Kremlin apparently plans to start withdrawing money from its $88 billion sovereign wealth fund as part of its continued effort to prop up the ruble, which has lost nearly half its value against the U.S. dollar in the past year. Russia’s central bank has spent a reported $76 billion in an ultimately failed attempt to support the ruble over the past year.

None of this should suggest that Russia is in immediate danger of financial collapse. The country still has substantial foreign currency reserves, in the hundreds of billions of dollars, despite the fact that it has been spending them down as part of the effort to protect the ruble. However, Ulyukayev’s recognition that international debt market are, for all intents and purposes, likely to be closed to the Russian government in the near future makes those reserves look a lot smaller.



Read more: http://www.thefiscaltimes.com/2015/...Makes-Private-Sector-Power-Grab#ixzz3Ov5rJ9Dn
 

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Brooklyn Nets Owner Mikhail Prokhorov Isn't The Only Russian Billionaire Retreating From US Investments

  • JAN. 15, 2015, 9:41 AM
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mikhail-prokhorov-russian-billionaire.jpg
Alexsey Druginyn/RIA Novosti/Pool/ReutersPresidential candidate Mikhail Prokhorov (right) talks with Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin during their meeting in Moscow on March 5, 2012.
See Also

Report: Russian Billionaire Mikhail Prokhorov Is Selling The Brooklyn Nets

Mikhail Prokhorov Is Going To Make A Killing On The Brooklyn Nets Sale

The Brooklyn Nets Are Caught In The Center Of Russia's Economic Crisis


Russian billionaire Mikhail Prokhorov caused a stir among sports fans this week with news that he mightsell his majority stake in the Brooklyn Nets basketball franchise.

But the $1.3 billion New York City property isn’t the only thing Prokhorov, the 12th richest man in Russia, is backing out of. He and other rich Russians are suddenly pulling back on U.S. investments of all kinds, and the causes are not all financial.

Russia’s struggling ruble and contracting economy are certainly contributing factors, but insiders say political concerns are also spurring the investment retreat.

“We work with a lot of Russian companies and this seems to be a common story. They're just not interested in the U.S. market,” Sergei Millian, President of the Russian-American Chamber of Commerce, said.

“I strongly believe this might be because of the political situation within the Russian Federation,” he said, alluding to possible pressure from the Kremlin. “There may have been some informal instructions from top government officials to be very careful about investing in the United States.”

U.S. President Barack Obama and European allies have been increasing sanctions against Russian companies, banks and business leaders in response to Russia's continued presence in Ukraine. More than 5,000 people have died since the conflict between pro-Russian separatists and the Ukrainian government began last year.

To be sure, the sanctions, a 50 percent drop in oil prices and a December currency crisis have certainly squeezed Russian investors.

“There are a few reasons why Prokhorov would want to sell the Nets,” said Marlen Kruzhkov, attorney at New York-based firm Gusrae Kaplan Nusbaum, which advises wealthy Russian clients on U.S. investment opportunities. He explained that, when the ruble fell 45 percent last year, the cost of servicing debt increased by the same amount.

“So even when you’re making your money in rubles, you’re still paying your debt in dollars so you end up losing a lot of money in the transfer,” Kruzhkov said. “That, coupled with the U.S. sanctions that have cut off a lot of banks from creditors in the West, is forcing people to rethink their position in terms of which businesses to keep versus businesses of which to divest themselves.”

But Millian thinks it’s something more than currency problems. Though he did notice a slowdown amid increasing sanctions, he said this time it’s more of an “abrupt halt,” just in the past few days.

Millian said he expects further pullback from a particular kind of Russian investor. While many Russian-American millionaires and billionaires are suffering from the currency issues, they still live, work and make money in the U.S., so will likely maintain their current projects. But others, who spend most of their time in Russia or abroad, are more likely to continue withdrawing American investments.

Millian noted a recent example: A Russian company recently backed out of a massive high-rise building project with a top developer in a major city where they had planned to be the principal investors. He also mentioned another mining venture in California that should have been popular but had no interest.

"It was ready to be developed and is such a promising investment," he said, noting the mine already had almost $1 billion in assets. Though he reached out to people who would normally be interested in the same kind of project, none have taken it on.

“We’ve never seen anything like this. They don’t even want to look at the documents,” he said.



Read more: http://www.ibtimes.com/brooklyn-net...llionaire-retreating-us-1783854#ixzz3Ov6okMEE
 

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FinanceMore: Brooklyn Nets Basketball Russia Ruble
The Brooklyn Nets Are Caught In The Center Of Russia's Economic Crisis

  • JAN. 15, 2015, 8:46 AM
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mikhail-prokhorov-nets.jpg
REUTERS/Brendan McDermidBrooklyn Nets owner Mikhail Prokhorov (C) speaks with reporters.



Russia's tanking economy and currency might have something to do with the possible sale of the Brooklyn Nets.


For months there have been rumors that Mikhail Prokhorov, the owner of the Brooklyn Nets, is thinking about selling the team. On Tuesday, Bloomberg's Scott Shoshnick reported that the team is for sale.

Bleacher Report's Howard Beck confirmed the report, and then added "Russian economy a driving factor" in a tweet:


So what does the ruble crisis have to do with a New York basketball team? Well, selling a sports franchise is one the quickest ways to make cash.

It's no secret that the Nets have been hemorrhaging money (the team reportedly lost $144 million in the 2013-2014 season), but that's just pocket change compared to how much Prokhorov lost in Russia over the past year.

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Bloomberg Billionaires/Twitter



According to the Bloomberg billionaires index, Prokhorov lost $411.1 million in just 48 hours after Russia's central bank hiked rates up to 17% on Dec. 16, 2014. (That's three times as much as the Nets lost in the entire 2013-2014 season.) :huhldup::wow::damn:


And over the year leading up to that date, Prokhorov lost a whopping $2.5 billion as the ruble plunged over 40% against the dollar. His current net worth is estimated to be about $10.8 billion. :whoo:


Since the Nets are reportedly worth somewhere between $780 million and $1.3 billion, Prokhorov could offset some of his losses by selling the team.

A team owner with the need for liquidity could sell a team in "somewhere between 90 to 180 days," Charles Baker, a sports and media partner at DLA Piper and the head of the firm's sports mergers and acquisitions practice, told IB Times.

"If you look at the Donald Sterling situation," he continued, "once the NBA took unilateral action, the team was sold basically in the course of a week. If somebody comes to the table and has the cash, the only obstacle would be league approval. When a league wants to move quickly, they’re able to move quickly.”

Interestingly, immediately after the first Western sanctions on Russia were announced, Prokhorov said that he wanted tomove the company that runs the Nets to Russia. At the time, the NBA stated that it had not been notified of these changes.

So far, Prokhorov's spokesperson maintains that there is "nothing imminent in terms of a sale of any stake in the team," and in an official statement, the Nets said that "ownership is always open to listening to offers — that's just good business."





Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/russia-economy-brooklyn-nets-prokhorov-2015-1#ixzz3Ov78fTxY
 

88m3

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FinanceMore: CIA Russia
Here's The Deal With The CIA's Weird Russian Tweet

  • JAN. 15, 2015, 11:49 AM
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On Thursday the CIA tweeted a cryptic quote by Russian novelist Boris Pasternak, the author of "Doctor Zhivago."

Check it out below:


Translation:"I wrote the novel in order for it to be published and read, and that remains my only desire."

At first glance this looks like yet another Twitter hack, but there's an incredible story behind this.


The CIA has a history of smuggling subversive books into countries, including the Soviet Union. One of those books was "Doctor Zhivago."

After working on the novel on and off over more than 20 years, Pasternak first submitted it for publication in 1956. But the KGB rejected it and characterized it as "malicious libel."

screen%20shot%202015-01-15%20at%2012.41.41%20pm.png
Amazon



Pasternak so desperately wanted the book to get out that he gave copies to associates Isaiah Berlin and George Katkov to take to England, Jacqueline de Proyart to take to France, and a young Italian journalist to take to Italy.


The novel ended up spending six months on the top of The New York Times' best-seller list, and it was a huge sensation around the world.

In 1957, less than a month after the book appeared in Italy, a CIA memo "cited an expert's view that it was 'more important than any other literature which has yet come out of the Soviet Bloc,'" reports The The New York Review of Books.

But it still wasn't available in the USSR.

So the CIA had a secret plan to get the novel into the country. After many obstacles, it managed to get the novel published en masse and sent copies to be distributed at the Brussels International World Fair. The organization also gave copies to sailors bound for the Soviet Union.

Long story short: It worked.

A CIA memo concluded that "this phase can be considered completed successfully," according to the New York Review of Books.

Pasternak won the Nobel Prize at the end of 1958 for his work, but he was denounced by the head of the Komsomol as a "pig fouling its own sty." Pasternak was afraid of being deported, and he rejected the prize.

If you want to read the whole crazy story of the CIA's once-secret involvement, head to The New York Review of Books.



Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/cia-sent-cryptic-tweet-in-russian-2015-1#ixzz3OvBfxlTt


2014-03-21-salt.gif


:mjlol::mjlol::mjlol::mjlol::mjlol:
 
Last edited:

Dominique Wilkins

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Contracts all fukked up... :mjlol:










Putin's Closest Ally Wants Closer Ties To The West

  • JAN. 15, 2015, 10:13 AM
  • 1,005
  • 4
belarus-alexander-lukashenko-putin-2.jpg
RIA Novosti/REUTERSBelarus' President Alyaksandr Lukashenka
See Also

Kim Jong-Un May Have Just Accepted Putin's Invitation To Visit Moscow

Russia Is Constructing An Arctic Stronghold 30 Miles From The Finnish Border

The Brooklyn Nets Are Caught In The Center Of Russia's Economic Crisis


Belarusian President Alyaksandr Lukashenka has vowed to improve ties with the West, which are badly strained, and warned Russia not to oppose the effort.

Speaking to parliament on January 15, Lukashenka said his country will be "consistently and purposefully building ties with the EU and United States."

In a dig at Russia, which has been hit with Western sanctions over its interference in Ukraine, Lukashenka said, "We do not resent the fact that Russia currently is undertaking colossal efforts to normalize its relations with the West. Well, then you should not resent this either."

"All sides must calm down and work properly," he said, suggesting that Moscow's deep rift with the West was doing Russia's partners in regional trade and security alliances no good.

At the same time, he promised that Western countries will never "replace" Russia for Belarus, saying that "Belarus has never been a traitor."

Lukashenka has alienated the United States and EU with his intolerance for dissent over 20 years in power, but he often seeks to play Russia and the West off against each other.



Read more: http://www.rferl.org/content/lukash...e-vties-with-west/26795421.html#ixzz3Ov3nfk9P

lmao

fukk this guy
 
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