Putin takes aim at US assets in Russia for ‘compensation’

His decree lists securities, real estate, movable property and property rights among the US-owned assets liable for seizure

Russian President Vladimir Putin. Picture: SPUTNIK/SERGEI GUNEEV/REUTERS
Russian President Vladimir Putin. Picture: SPUTNIK/SERGEI GUNEEV/REUTERS

Moscow — Russia will identify US property, including securities, that could be used as compensation for losses sustained as a result of any seizure of frozen Russian assets in the US, according to a decree signed by President Vladimir Putin on Thursday.

The decree authorises Russia’s government commission on foreign asset sales to identify the relevant property and states that decisions on compensation would be made in court.

G7 negotiators have been discussing for weeks how to best exploit about $300bn worth of Russian financial assets, such as major currencies and government bonds, which were frozen shortly after Moscow invaded Ukraine in February 2022.

Russia’s ability to mete out like-for-like retaliation if Western leaders seize its frozen assets has been eroded by dwindling foreign investment, but it may go after private investors’ cash instead, officials and economists said earlier in May.

Thursday’s decree listed securities, real estate, movable property and property rights among the US-owned assets liable for seizure.

Former president Dmitry Medvedev acknowledged in April that Russia holds an insignificant amount of US state property and that any response Russia makes would be asymmetrical, focusing on private individuals’ assets.

The assets of many foreign investors, including both individuals and major US investment funds, are held in special “type-C” accounts Russia introduced shortly after sending its army into Ukraine and being hit by a barrage of Western sanctions in February 2022.

Money in those accounts cannot be transferred out of Russia without permission from Russian authorities. 

Reuters

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