February 2004

Oligarchs scramble to join Putin's club

by Ben Aris


Vladimir Putin
The arrest of Yukos oil company owner Mikhail Khodorkovsky was a watershed for Russian business. The smart money has abandoned the lead of the former poster boy for improved corporate governance and western style management, and instead is scrambling to join what could be called the Commanding Heights Club chaired by president Vladimir Putin (pictured right).

Yukos was credited with sparking a rapid improvement in corporate governance, and other oligarchs followed its example, hoping to see the same 1,000% share price gains.

But the "Khodorkovsky effect" has worn off and now the queue is lining up outside Putin's club. Those in the club are prepared to put their commercial interests (and those of their shareholders) second to the Kremlin's wishes. If profits and driving up the share price dominated corporate culture in the 1990s, as Putin's second term starts it is the Kremlin's ambitions that...


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