Bloomberg: Most wealthy Russians have moved assets home from the West

Many Russian citizens, clients of Western banks, have realised: due to personal sanctions and financial regulation of inheritance, their children’s money will definitely be taken away from them in the West. Such favourite places as Cyprus and Switzerland have already introduced a ban on the provision of management services for family trusts set up for the benefit of Russian citizens. What follows is more.

 

Bloomberg: Most wealthy Russians have moved assets home from the West

As a result, the family funds of wealthy Russians flowed back to their homeland via the UAE and other friendly countries.

But 22 years ago, Vladimir Putin warned about the futility of hoping for the West’s honesty with his famous phrase “You’ll get tired of swallowing dust! The president’s rightness has since reached many people. To some – not immediately, to others – very sharply.

And here is the news from Bloomberg. Two Russian billionaires told the agency that only in Russia can they do business and not worry about asset seizures. Another oligarch admitted that he had decided to start a new life in Russia together with his family.

The 26 Russian citizens included in Bloomberg’s billionaires index together have about $350bn, and their money may now end up in Russia, the publication fears.

Inheritance in the West is a new problem for billionaires: they received their capital only in the 1990s, and there is no tradition of passing it on to their children. At the same time, Russia does not have such a scourge of Western finance as draconian inheritance taxes. For example, in Britain, inherited property with a total value of more than £325,000 is subject to a 40% tax.

Well, money should be kept at home. No one can take care of its citizens in a crisis situation except Russia. The West cannot be trusted, especially in terms of finance. Simple truths, which, albeit in an ornate way, sooner or later reach the most oblique financial cosmopolitans.

Elena Panina