Russia: 2008 Index of Economic Freedom

Hello,

It is not very often that I get beaten to the punch on something that I feel is important! Real Russian Project has posted an article on Russia and economic freedom!

(article)

Rankings Versus Reality:
It’s Time for Inside-the-Beltway Conservatives
to Get Real on Russia

I scrapped my article because I think that Yuri did a good job at getting the point across!

Thank you Yuri, for real insight.

Kyle
comments always welcome.

PS: This is the link, to the know it all: American Foundation!
http://www.heritage.org/index/

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(Click: Read More for Yuri’s article)========================================
Last week, the Heritage Foundation, one of the largest and perhaps most influential think tanks in Washington, D.C., published its annual global rankings of economic freedom. While think tank reports seldom have as much impact as their authors would like to believe, this particular document was published in partnership with The Wall Street Journal.

The report claimed that out of 150 countries surveyed in 2007, Russia is now ranked 134th in the world in terms of economic freedom, allegedly slipping fourteen spots from its lowly 120th ranking at the end of 2006. Russia was supposedly less free than all of the other countries in the former Soviet Union, with the exceptions of Belarus and Turkmenistan. Russia is also said to be lagging far behind such surging economic powerhouses as Pakistan and Cambodia.

Not just oil, gas, timber and metals anymore – Russia’s booming consumer sector has drawn the most interest from emerging market fund managers and investment banks in the past year.

The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, where members of the 10,000 strong Saudi royal family find their way into every major deal, was ranked sixty spots ahead of Russia. This could lead a cynical Russian to ask whether the Heritage rankings are based on a country’s actual investment climate and success in global markets, or whether the country in question is a close ally of America. The point here is not to belittle the hard won economic gains that have been made by any particular country, but to challenge the premise that countries can be neatly graded on some imaginary freedom scale by think tank scholars sitting in Washington D.C.

In the same year that the Heritage Foundation claims that Russia backslid on democracy and economic freedom, global investors cast a vote of confidence in the country by pouring over $55 billion into the Russian economy. Many scholars and pundits can try to dismiss this record as a lucky break caused by high commodity prices and a glut of global liquidity, but one need not look very far to find some very large holes in this argument.

First, the biggest IPO recorded worldwide in 2007 was for Russia’s Vneshtorbank (VTB) – the second largest retail bank in the country – not for some Russian oil and gas or mining conglomerate. Second, in 2008 the largest Russian IPO will be for Unified Energy Systems, when the Russian government will be breaking up the state-owned monopoly and privatizing Russia’s electric power grid. Third, for anyone who actually flips past the Wall Street Journal’s editorial page to the business pages, the fastest rising Russian stocks in recent months have not been energy exporting giants such as Gazprom, Lukoil, and Rosneft, but consumer-oriented companies that are enjoying strong domestic growth like Golden Telecom, Rostelekom, and Wimm-Bill-Dann.

Fourth, many countries are receiving huge windfalls from oil and gas prices as well, but their economies remain basket cases – Venezuela, Nigeria and Iran come to mind – while others have failed to convert their enormous natural resources into any globally recognized brands or diversified companies. Just ask yourself – how many global emerging market equity funds hold Petreleos de Venezuela in their portfolios, as opposed to Gazprom? And how many car factories are Toyota, Nissan, and Ford building in Saudi Arabia, as compared with Russia? To ask each question is to already know the answer.

Granted, Russia is still not Switzerland by a long shot. As President Putin’s designated successor, Dimitri Medvedev, has repeatedly acknowledged, Russia has severe problems that threaten its long-term economic growth, including double digit inflation, a declining population outside major cities, and the age old bane of corruption. But the question remains: why do so many Western think tanks and scholars feel compelled to downplay or dismiss the real economic gains that Russians have achieved in the last eight years? Is it just opposition to the Putin government and its policies, or is there an ingrained anti-Russian bias in many American institutions, particularly among Washington’s leading conservative think tanks?

The Cold War has left behind many legacies, and one of them was a certain number of people and donors inside the Beltway who still proudly take credit for hastening the collapse of the Soviet Union in the 1980s. Unfortunately, when it comes to Russia, many of these same aging donors and think tankers have remained stuck on autopilot since 1992. They still view Moscow as the seat of an Evil Empire that must accept having NATO on its doorstep and being cut out of energy deals in its own back yard.

After 9/11, many inside-the-Beltway conservatives were prepared to accept President Bush’s vision of the America and Russia as allies in the war on international terrorism. But the well-financed “revolutions” in Ukraine and Georgia soon restored these die hard Russophobes to their previous default worldview. Rather than seeing these developments for what they actually were – the settling of accounts between rival clans of oligarchs and their political patrons in each country – each “revolution” was magnified into a zero sum struggle for power and influence between Moscow and Washington. Such simplistic attitudes naturally lead to a host of logical absurdities and ideological contradictions, with the only consistency being that Russia’s position must always be wrong.

For example, when Gazprom stopped subsidizing several former Soviet republics with cheap natural gas in 2005-2007 , Russia was condemned for allegedly using energy as a weapon to punish ex-Soviet republics for not towing Moscow’s line. Even Belarus, which The Wall Street Journal and The Economist had previously derided as an impoverished Kremlin puppet state, was instantly transformed, following its price dispute with Gazprom, into yet another victim of the Kremlin’s “energy imperialism”. The idea that Russia simply cannot afford to subsidize its neighbors anymore, or that former Soviet republics that claim to have adopted market economics ought to be charged at least half of what Western Europeans are paying for the same Russian gas never seems to have registered with these so-called “free marketeers”.

Naturally, all of this leads us to the question of motives and double standards. No less a Putin skeptic than Washington Post reporter Anne Applebaum, has asked how much influence money from deposed Russian oligarchs like Mikhail Khodorkovsky has bought in Washington. It remains far more politically acceptable for elite Washington conservatives to be wined in dined in Amman or Singapore than in Moscow. When the President of Georgia is an alumnus of Columbia University and mouths all the right buzzwords, American think tankers don’t ask why they are attending a democracy promotion conference in Tbilisi that costs $6,000 per person while the average Georgian makes $300 a month.

Ultimately, why should ordinary Americans care about any of this? What affect does it have on their lives, their jobs, or their investments? The answer, which we have all been reminded of in recent weeks, is that after decades of Americans investing in the rest of the world, the world is now investing in America. If Kuwaiti and Abu Dhabi-based sovereign wealth funds can buy major stakes in Merrill Lynch and Citigroup then the Kremlin’s $180 billion Stabilization Fund can invest in American companies and capital markets. Russian companies also want to swap assets with multinational oil companies in return for exploration and development contracts in Russia – which means Gazprom and Rosneft may be acquiring shares of oil refineries in Texas or Lousiana in the not too distant future.

Twenty five years ago, when many American protectionists were alarmed about government-backed Japanese firms allegedly buying up a “bankrupt” America, a Reaganite supply-sider named George Gilder wrote a book titled Wealth and Poverty, supporting free trade and arguing for American optimism. Gilder wrote that “capital goes where it is welcomed.” and argued that Americans should welcome international investment, regardless of whether it comes from foreign firms with government ties or not.

What was true in the 1980s holds even more true in today’s globalizing world. If American conservatives are confident that democracy and free trade will prevail over protectionism and authoritarianism, then they should believe that our marketplace will have a greater effect on Chinese, Arab or Russian investors and policies than their money will have on our markets. It would be a shame if a combination of Cold War nostalgia and ignorance were to cost the U.S. thousands of jobs, and prevent the formation of a lasting partnership between America and Russia.

The author of this article is a former intern at several Washington D.C. think tanks. The author currently works in the U.S. financial services industry. The views expressed here are his own.
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No One Knows Who Killed Alexander Litvinenko!

Hello,

I was drinking my morning cup of coffee & thinking about a comment that I received about Alexander Litvinko!

Rotus said.”Recall that this spat began because Russia refused to extradite Andrei Lugovoy to Britain for trial for the murder of Alexander Litvinenko.”

So I started to look up about: Who did kill Alexander Litvinenko?
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/01/05/60minutes/
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/17332541/
http://www.slate.com/id/2167972/entry/2167974/

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/2006/11/29/

http://www.russiablog.org/2006/11/who_poisoned_alex
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/6180432.stm

The statements are all hearsay & accusations!
We all seem to know who did it, but yet we all can not prove it!
We have let media muddle and destroy the facts & allowed media to sway public opinion.

The bottom line is that no one knows!

Kyle & Svet

PS: Thanks Rotus for bringing that up, I find it interesting that the world has made up its mind on who killed Litvinenko! Reminds me of the old days; “Hang them first from the nearest tree, then ask questions later!”

Last But Not The Least Important Link: Russia’s Killing Game!(Click: Read More!)
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Alexander Litvinenko and Russia’s killing game

The death from radiation poisoning of Alexander Litvinenko has cast light on the Russian power struggle, writes Boris Kagarlitsky

After the murder of journalist Anna Politkovskaya in October, I predicted that there would be a follow up to this story. Unfortunately, I was right.

Alexander Litvinenko’s death has become headline news in Britain rather than in Russia. This is quite logical – the British people won’t just stand and watch a political exile living in England being dispatched.

Scotland Yard confirmed that Litvinenko, a former KGB officer who was granted British citizenship only a month ago, was poisoned. On Friday 24 November he died.

Litvinenko’s employer, or at least sponsor in London, is the opposition oligarch Boris Berezovsky. He hastened to name the main suspect – Russian president Vladimir Putin.

The assault on Litvinenko seems to be connected to the assassination of Anna Politkovskaya, which makes the plot even more twisted.

Investigators believe that the former KGB agent was poisoned in a Japanese restaurant where he met an Italian journalist who allegedly possessed data concerning the Politkovskaya case.

After being interrogated by British detectives, the journalist, fearful for his life, took cover in Italy.

The whole situation could serve perfectly as a plot for a political detective novel.

The rules of the genre dictate that the evidence will lead to the top of the power hierarchy.

The number of victims will grow as the investigation goes on, but in the long run no charge will be filed, though everything will be as clear as a day.

Litvinenko had accused the Kremlin and the Russian intelligence agencies of paving Putin’s way to power by blowing up residential houses in Moscow in 1999 and blaming Chechen rebels. Some of Litvinenko’s arguments were quite convincing, some not enough.

The case of the house explosions in Moscow will never be solved. The true story of the 11 September 2001 terrorist attack in the US or the murder of John Kennedy and many other high profile cases of the 20th century will also never be revealed.

As a rule in these events, the official version loses its credibility with time while alternative versions lack evidence. The authorities ostentatiously refuse to examine these versions, and thus deflate them.

Private investigations generate contradictory facts and speculations. But the verdict is delivered by public opinion, which is always set against the powers that be.

Raising the ghosts of the past would be the most disadvantageous tactics for the Russian administration. Litivinenko, residing in London, was not a thorn in the side of the Russian authorities.

His version of the story behind the explosions in Moscow is just one of a number, and not the most convincing. But when a former KGB agent becomes a murder victim, his accusations gain credibility and the whole affair moves to the front burner.

The Kremlin’s foes will not miss a chance to use the poisoning of Litvinenko as one more argument against the authorities. Moscow will again be seen by the West as a capital of the “Evil Empire”. What is to the Kremlin’s benefit in all that?

It is only in “first approximation” that the critics of the present regime seem to be the only victims of the current events. If we consider the situation in more detail, we find that the authorities are extremely vulnerable to such developments.

The blows hit those in power, leaving the opposition leaders safe and sound. As a result the opposition gets its martyrs and the authorities are challenged.

Some pro-Kremlin analysts have even suggested that Litvinenko’s poisoning and the journalist’s murder are provocations and that the opposition itself and Boris Berezovsky in person have organised the affairs in order to discredit the Kremlin’s ruling elite.

But it’s difficult to think of Berezovsky trying to kill his closest associate in London. However vicious he might be, he is not crazy.

The 1999 explosions in Moscow reflected the struggle for power within the ruling elite. The current murders and murder attempts have the same nature.

Neither Putin nor Berezovsky would contract such murders – for both of them the possibility of the backlash is higher than possible revenues.

I think there are other stakeholders at a lower level who pursue their own interests and use their own methods.

Intensification of the struggle for power is the result of their activity. The less stable the situation in the country is, the more there is ground for drastic changes in the political life of the country.

And undermining Russia’s position in the world will permit the political elites to retain control over the new president, who will be elected next year. They want to make him a hostage of those who have taken him to power.

Dirty and ineffective political tricks will make Putin’s successor dependent on forces behind the Kremlin’s throne.

The Big Game is on and it’s not the presidential post that is at stake. It is the leverage of control over whoever is in this post.

Boris Kagarlitsky is a director of the Institute for Globalisation Studies in Moscow.
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Russian News: January 22nd, 2008!

MOSCOW (Reuters) – Russia on Tuesday sent two long-range bombers to the Bay of Biscay, off the French and Spanish Atlantic coasts, to test-fire missiles in what it billed as its biggest navy exercise in the area since Soviet times.

British and Norwegian Tornado and F-16 jets were escorting the Russian ‘Blackjack’ bombers, Interfax reported, quoting the Russian Air Force.

However, the French Defence Ministry spokesman said his country had been informed about the Russian exercises.

Firing missiles off the coastline of two members of the NATO military alliance is the latest in a series of Kremlin moves flexing Moscow’s military muscle on the world stage. =================================
RBC, 22.01.2008, Moscow 14:10:22.Revenue of Dixy Group, one of Russia’s top food retail chains, surged 42 percent to USD 1.431bn in 2007 compared to a year earlier, the company reported today. In ruble terms, revenue amounted to RUB 36.604bn (approx. USD 1.48bn), which is 33 percent greater than in 2006.

RBC, 22.01.2008, Moscow 13:32:51.As a result of geological survey, Gazprom has been able to report a rise in gas reserves totaling 585bn cubic meteres in 2007, which is 7bn cubic meters greater than the estimate, the Russian energy giant’s press office stated today. Natural gas production (excluding that of Gazprom’s subsidiaries) amounted to 548.5bn cubic meters.

RBC, 21.01.2008, Moscow 16:51:14.Russia is not willing to exert pressure on Poland or other countries regarding the deployment of the US anti-missile defence system in Eastern Europe, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told journalists following a meeting with his Polish counterpart Radoslaw Sikorski. Russia only wanted Poland to consider all risks and threats to both its own and European security before making a final decision, Lavrov said. He added that Sikorski had confirmed that this was Poland’s intention as well. In turn, the Polish Minister noted that only the US and Poland would decide on the issue and that Russia would also benefit from the deployment of the shield, as it was designed to intercept ballistic missiles.

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The Cost of Believing in America!

I had to reprint this article: It says a lot in a short amount of time!
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By Konstantin Sonin,

Ten years ago, an economic crisis in one developing country could set off a chain reaction among investors around the world. And once investors suffered sharp losses in one place — for example, Thailand, South Korea or Indonesia — they began rolling back everywhere. This time around, the scenario is playing out differently. Although the financial markets crisis that began last year has not yet reached the point where investors are pulling out of developing markets, money continues to flow freely in the opposite direction as the world’s financial giants tap into government funds from former Third World countries.

Citigroup and Merrill Lynch announced multibillion-dollar losses in connection with their mortgage portfolios last week. Citigroup has twice over the past three months turned for cash to so-called sovereign wealth funds. It sold 5 percent of its shares to the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority for $7.5 billion in November, and now it is offering shares to financial corporations controlled by the governments of Singapore, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia. The haste with which Citigroup is seeking investment from the developing world suggests that the company does not see any light at the end of the tunnel for its internal financial problems.

In all fairness, though, this is not the first time Citigroup has resorted to such measures. The Saudi royal family, along with others, first came to Citigroup’s rescue early in the 1990s. In fact, it is difficult to find a global financial giant that is not hunting for cash these days. Merrill Lynch has already turned for help to a Singapore government investment fund, while Swiss-based UBS received $9.7 billion from another Singapore government fund last fall. At the same time, Morgan Stanley received a $5 billion investment from a Chinese government fund.

It is understandable why these corporations are turning to foreign investment funds for badly needed cash. They very well might not know the full scope of their financial losses stemming from the collapse of the subprime mortgage market. But what can be motivating the owners of these sovereign funds to invest? Of course, buying into a “distressed” company often leads to reaping big profits down the line, and there is the possibility that this might actually be one of those rare opportunities that investors dream about their entire lives — to buy a valuable commodity at bargain prices. But there is also a high probability that they could end up on the losing side of this gamble. The owners of sovereign funds understand that, as foreign investors, they are treated as outsiders by U.S. politicians, and this carries a certain element of political risk from them.

The dollar has become the world currency based largely on the belief that the democratic system in the United States will not allow the government to shift to inflationary financing. Thus, Chinese and Singaporean investors are willing to channel huge sums of cash into Citigroup and Merrill Lynch in the belief that U.S. democracy — with its competitive electoral system, independent judicial system and a media acting as a powerful Fourth Estate watchdog — will continue to function as an effective and powerful regulator of financial corporations and guarantor of political and economic stability.

We have already become accustomed to a growing U.S. trade deficit and to the fact that the developing world finances American consumers to a large degree. It may now be the case that taxpayers’ money from developing countries being sent to the United States will end up covering losses incurred by irresponsible bankers and inattentive market regulators.

Keeping faith in the United States’ economy and democracy comes at a price indeed.

Konstantin Sonin, a professor at the New Economic School/CEFIR, is a columnist for Vedomosti.
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Kyle

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Does The World Have Faith In America?

Hello,

Just some news off the wire, Russian stock market is being affected by this also. Looks like the world is losing a lot of faith in the American Dollar! Russian stocks down about 7 % today.
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LONDON (Reuters) – World stocks nosedived and demand for safe-haven bonds and currencies soared on Monday as fears gripped investors that a deteriorating U.S. economy would drag others down with it.

The losses on the blue-chip stock indexes of Germany, Britain and France alone amounted to more than $350 billion, or roughly the size of the combined economies of New Zealand, Hungary and Singapore.

MSCI’s main world stock index, a benchmark gauge of stock markets globally, sank 3.3 percent, falling below its 2007 bottom to lows last seen in December 2006 and taking it down more than 12 percent so far this year.

Its emerging market equities counterpart lost more than 5.5 percent. Meanwhile, the spread between emerging market bond yields and U.S. Treasury yields, a key gauge of risk appetite, was just off its widest in two years.

“Weak global economic data, poor corporate data, increasing fears about the possibility of a recession … have left investors drowning in a sea of red,” said Henk Potts, equity strategist at Barclays Stockbrokers.
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I hear rumor that England is having to back the banks with a lot of their Nations money??
I also hear that Bush is asking countries for help and to still believe in America??

Looks like my articles are correct, The Dollar is going down! (Thump)
http://windowstorussia.com/2007/12/russia-not-happy-that-dollar-crashing.html
http://kylekeeton.com/2007/11/russia-dollar-is-hurting-overseas.html
http://kylekeeton.com/2007/11/russian-rubles-dollar-is-unstable.html
http://kylekeeton.com/2007/11/russians-do-not-give-us-dollars.html
http://windowstorussia.com/2007/10/russian-ruble-growing-stronger-everyday.html
http://windowstorussia.com/2007/09/10-reasons-why-russia-cant-trust-uncle.html
http://windowstorussia.com/2007/08/rbc-tells-it-like-it-is-dollar-going.html

This is not something I am proud of & wish that America would have dealt with her problems years ago. I was in the business of making money for companies all my working career! This was a problem that has been in the works for many years. Now it is a problem for the world!

Do you think that there is a replacement Dollar in the works?

America is going to have to bite the bullet on this one!

Kyle

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Russia: British Need To Cooperate!

Looks like: cultural and educational?

The Russian Foreign Ministry stated Friday that the British Council’s regional offices might be allowed to reopen if Britain resumed cooperation with the Federal Security Service and expressed a willingness to ease visa rules for Russians. It was this lack of cooperation in the first place that expelled Britain!

Britain refused to hold talks to simplify the visa regime and stopped cooperating! After Britain became stubborn, the conditions had to be recreated for the resumption of talks.

Britain may not be ready to resume cooperation, there seems to be a list of 34 Russian diplomats who may face expulsion from Britain. The group includes Alexander Sternik, head of the Russian Embassy’s political section, and Andrei Pritsepov, aide to the ambassador, & Britain still makes public statements that Russia is to blame for the all the issues! (Seems childish)

While all these issues are flying around; The Britain council’s Moscow office remains open. Seems that the Moscow Britain office knows how to be nice and give the local government what they want?

A statement from Britain was issued, “The standoff was harming the Russian people but not Britain.” also stated, “We concluded that the only victim in this issue appears to be the people of Russia.” also said. “Sharing our cultural and educational technologies benefits Russians and not Britons. Thus it is only Russia that is losing.” also said, “British newspapers are warning Russia of possible repercussions!”

Is Britain really serious about this? (What makes Britain so special?)

America once had to get tough with the British! Looks like Russia needs to put them in their place also!

Now I see the root of the Visa issues in Russia, We can all thank, British Government!

Kyle & Svet

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Russia: Wal-Mart Next?

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Wal-Mart Stores Inc (WMT.N: Quote, Profile, Research), the world’s biggest retailer, could expand its reach into Russia in within the next 24 months, according to a research note from UBS.

“We believe expansion into Russia rounds out Wal-Mart’s ‘BRIC’ (Brazil, Russia, India and China) exposure,” UBS analyst Neil Currie wrote in a note on Thursday.

Currie said he expected Wal-Mart to make the leap into Russia within the next 12 to 24 months, probably by taking a minority stake in a local retail chain.
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This is not a good thing for Russia!
Kyle & Svet

comments always welcome.

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Russia: American Style Foods!

Hello,

I was drinking my morning cup of coffee and I was thinking how glad I am that Russians seem to eat so much less processed foods. I feel that my diet here is so much better. It is very easy to get fresh foods. You can buy fresh vegetables and fruits at almost every bus stop & Metro in Moscow. When we travel to the Village we pass by areas that specialize in certain fruits. On a 350 km trip we pass what I call; Pear valley, Apple way, Potato City, Cranberry Mile & Blueberry Village! These are just a portion of the available foods on the road trip. Then I was presented with an article about “Kellogg Foods” from America! I then realized that Russians are eating more like Americans everyday.

Once again Russia has let an American company buy up a gold mine! (link)

I have watched, in the 2 years I have been studying Moscow, The infiltration of American foods! Example: 2 years ago peanut butter and maple syrup was almost impossible to find. Now you can find more than one brand and the price is dropping fast! 2 years ago you could not find celery anywhere, now every fruit and veggy stand carries it as normal product. 2 years ago the availability of lettuce was very scarce. Now they have leaf lettuce everywhere! The list goes on and on….

We go shopping and you see rows of Lays Potato Chips,Coke,Pepsi & Products labeled American! The Red, White & Blue stands out like a sore thumb on the shelves. 🙂

Now Kellogg has infiltrated Russia in a big way! With all the food brands from America here, I feel right at home!

So if you travel to Russia, You will have no problem finding foods that you can eat and recognize.

I am not sure that is a good thing??

Kyle & Svet

comments always welcome.

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(Click: Read more for Kellogg article!)
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Kellogg, whose cartoon tiger is pictured on its Frosties cereal boxes, announced Thursday that it had purchased United Bakers Group, the country’s biggest breakfast cereal maker, to take almost complete control of the local market.

United Bakers’ products, marketed primarily under the Yantar and Lyubyatovo brands, are very popular, and the company said it had a market share of 90 percent. Kellogg’s share is miniscule.

Both companies were tight-lipped about the terms of the deal, but Kellogg said it would have no impact on its 2008 operating profit.

Kellogg chief David Mackay described the acquisition as “an exciting strategic development for Kellogg.

“Consistent with our strategy, we continue to pursue the right kind of opportunities to grow our business,” he said in a statement.

The deal gives Kellogg its first plants in Russia — a total of six scattered across the country — as well as a large sales and distribution network.

Kellogg is coming to the right place at the right time because consumers have just started shifting en masse toward light-and-fast meals for breakfast, said Andrei Nikitin, a retail analyst with UralSib bank.

“Power-advertising by the likes of Kellogg and a new business culture have weaned Russians from their traditional breakfast meals, such as kasha,” Nikitin said.

“Many Russians now favor fast breakfast meals such as Kellogg Corn Flakes and Rice Krispies, in part because of strong advertisement by big companies with huge budgets like Kellogg,” he said.

Rice Krispies are not widely available in Russia, although Special K, Corn Flakes and Frosties can be found on many Moscow store shelves. Tony the Tiger, one of the company’s best-known trademarks, is known in Russia as “Tigr Tony.”

“This is fertile soil for Kellogg, and the trend will accelerate,” Nikitin said.

With the buy, Kellogg will make considerable savings on import tax, which had increased prices for its products, said Andrei Verkholantsev, consumer analyst with Antanta Capital Investment.

“Kellogg could leverage the synergy and economics of scale accruing from the deal to emerge as the single largest player in Russia,” he said.

Yevgeny Okulich-Kazarin, general director of United Bakers, called Thursday’s deal a reward for the company’s hard work. “This is an opportunity for United Bakers to further grow the business,” Okulich-Kazarin said in an e-mail.

Voronezh-based United Bakers, a closely held company, posted net sales of about $100 million in 2007. Like Kellogg, it also produces biscuits.

The company was founded in 2002 with an initial investment from the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development. Eagle Urals Fund, a regional venture fund managed by the Dutch company Eagle Venture Partners, acquired the company in 2004 and immediately invited in new investors. Alfa Capital Partners took over in 2005 and a year later sold control to International Moscow Bank. United Bakers’ nearly 4,000 employees, including its management team, will join Kellogg under the terms of the acquisition. The business will continue to have its headquarters in Voronezh and will report to Kellogg’s European division.

With 2006 sales of almost $11 billion, Kellogg Company is the world’s leading maker of cereal and a leading producer of convenience foods. Kellogg products are manufactured in 17 countries and marketed in more than 180 countries around the world.
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Russia: Village Homes!

Hello,

Just thought that we would post some pictures of village homes in Russia!

Kyle & Svet

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Russia: Coca Cola Woke Up!

Hello,

I have been writing about Coca Cola and their issues with Russia! Link 1 ; Link 2

It seems that Coke got smart and bowed to the pressure. This was a good move on their part, it might just have saved the Coke business in Russia!(Click: Read More for rest of article)
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Coca-Cola has called off a promotion after offended Orthodox believers lodged a complaint with prosecutors, a sharp reminder of the cultural pitfalls that foreign companies face when doing business abroad.

Hoping to tap into a growing tide of patriotism, the U.S. beverage giant had placed pictures of religious sites together with its logo on fridges in kiosks and shops in Nizhny Novgorod, the country’s third-biggest city.

In mid-December, a group of Orthodox believers sent an angry letter to the Nizhny Novgorod prosecutor’s office, the local bishop and the regional governor complaining about the promotion, which it claimed was blasphemous.

Some images, the authors of the letter said, portrayed religious sites upside down, including the cross. An inverted cross is said to represent a mockery of the Christian cross.

“In line with our internal policy of responsible marketing … we have decided to withdraw the images of religious objects and not to use them in the future,” Coca-Cola spokeswoman Yana Guskova said Tuesday.

Guskova maintained that the promotion had not intended to cause offense.

“This was an initiative using famous Russian historical sites and images to try to promote Russian cultural heritage and the idea that we need to preserve it,” she said.

All the pictures contain an outline of a Coca-Cola bottle with a photograph of a local religious site, such as a cathedral, captured inside it. The slogan “The Value of Tradition” runs up the side of the fridge, while the Coca-Cola logo dominates the other.

Orthodox church representatives said, however, that Coca-Cola had ridden roughshod over cultural sensitivities. “Large corporations have to take into account the local context, particularly the Christian context,” said Mikhail Prokopenko, spokesman for the Moscow Patriarchate. “[Coca-Cola] didn’t recognize the boundaries.”

The Orthodox protesters said in December that Coca-Cola should face formal charges for “inciting religious hatred.” But Prokopenko urged restraint, and said, “Both sides are at least now listening to each other, thank God.”

Irina Monakhova, a spokeswoman for the Nizhny Novgorod prosecutor’s office, said investigators were conducting an inquiry into the claims at the request of the residents and would make their findings known by the end of January.

Coca-Cola has run similar — but not so overtly religious — promotions with refrigerators in St. Petersburg, Ufa and Kazan without any problem, Guskova said.

Advertising slip-ups, while not uncommon, are often accidental in Russia, said Donald Tursman, creative director at the advertising agency TWBA in Moscow.

“In Russia, most clients are very conservative. They avoid drawing too much attention to their brands. It’s why most ads are bland and formulaic,” he said. “If there is even a chance that an ad will cause a stir, they won’t run it.”

In contrast, he said, some Western advertisers “intentionally run controversial ads because they know the media will talk about it.”(Moscow Times)
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Coke needs to realize that this is not America! I think that they got off easy this time.

Kyle & Svet

comments always welcome.

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