Giant Investment Bank To Profit From War In Ukraine

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The Wall Street firm has told the public it is “winding down” its business in Russia, portraying its actions as supportive of U.S. efforts to stop Russian President Vladimir Putin, reports NBCNews.

Bank giant cashing in on war

Goldman Sachs, the giant New York investment bank, is cashing in on the war in Ukraine by selling Russian debt to U.S. hedge funds — and using a legal loophole in the Biden administration’s sanctions to do it.

Western world scrambles

As the Western world scrambles to defend Ukraine by locking down Russian money, the company is acting as a broker between Moscow’s creditors and U.S. investors, pitching clients on the opportunity to take advantage of Russia’s war-crippled economy by buying its debt securities low now and selling them high later, according to four financial world sources familiar with the strategy.

Avoid scrutiny

An investor who declined a Goldman trader’s offer to add Russian debt to his hedge fund’s portfolio — because of the war — said the trader suggested he could “just put it in your personal account” to avoid scrutiny.

U.S. sanctions regime violated?

That does not violate the U.S. sanctions regime, but it is very different from the public face Goldman is putting on its relationship with Russia. In an emailed statement, Goldman is telling the public that it is “winding down” its business in Russia, portraying its actions as supportive of America’s effort to stop Russian President Vladimir Putin.

There is nothing illegal about brokering Russian debt trades. In fact, the Biden administration gave investment firms a green light to trade in Russian assets.

No trade with sanctioned counterparties

A spokesperson for Goldman Sachs said in an email Thursday: “Winding down our operations in Russia and supporting our clients around the globe in managing and closing out their market obligations are not mutually exclusive. We have robust systems and controls throughout our organization to ensure we are not trading with sanctioned counterparties.”

Memo on Trading Russian assets

When U.S. officials sanctioned Russian banks this month, it became illegal for U.S. companies to do business directly with major Russian financial institutions. But the Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control, or OFAC, issued a memo affirming the legal legitimacy of trading Russian assets in “secondary markets” — those not directly involving the Russian banks. That’s why Goldman can act as a broker.

OFAC’s statement

The sanctions action “does not prohibit trading in the secondary markets for debt or equity” of the Russian central bank, the Russian national wealth fund or the Russian Finance Ministry, as long as those institutions aren’t parties to the trades and the debts were issued before March 1, OFAC wrote.

The loopholes

In interviews with a dozen investors, current and former U.S. government officials and financial analysts, a recurring theme emerged: The Biden administration’s concern for U.S. investors, including major companies that broker deals for a buck, has stopped it from cracking down harder on Russia and left open the possibility that unsanctioned Putin cronies could gain access to cash by selling debt through Goldman Sachs.

“They’re in a damned-if-you-do, damned-if-you-don’t position,” a former U.S. sanctions official said. “If they shut down trading completely, there will be collateral consequences. The targets are so large — it’s not like you’re shutting down a small bank in Iran. But if you do a calibrated approach, they get yelled at for perceived loopholes.”

Goldman’s effort to profit from the war

Goldman’s effort to profit from the war highlights the complexities the Biden administration faces in trying to punish Russia without harming Wall Street and the economies of the U.S. and its allies. And it is a stark reminder that no asset is too toxic to be traded when there are willing buyers, sellers and brokers.

“Russian sovereign debt is awash throughout our economy,” said a senior administration official who spoke on the condition of anonymity to explain the administration’s reluctance to ban the trading of Russian debt. “It’s just infused into our economy. It’s so pervasive.”

Blocking all Russian debt trades

Most of the sovereign debt in question is in Russian bonds issued through government channels, including the Russian central bank. Government bonds are tools for countries to raise money from investors. While the crumbling Russian economy has made Russian debt of little current value, some investors believe it will rebound at some point in the future, allowing them to turn a profit.

The official said blocking all Russian debt trades could mess — the official used a different four-letter word — with financial markets in the U.S. and other countries in unintended ways.

“We can sanction new sovereign debt,” the official said, pointing to the recent ban on trading assets created after March 1. “We have not gotten into the game — and the Hill is looking into this — of how you could sanction debt that’s already in the marketplace.”

Locking down the old debt

Rep. Brad Sherman, D-Calif., a senior member of the Financial Services Committee, said he is working on legislation that would prohibit foreign subsidiaries of U.S. companies from trading in Russian debt issued after March 1. But he said there are scenarios in which he might favor locking down the old debt.

“The goal here is not to punish people who invested in this debt in February and in prior years,” Sherman said in a telephone interview. “The purpose is to make it harder for Putin to issue new debt. I’d be inclined to say that we should be banning investment in pre-March 1 debt if it would help in the purpose of depressing the value of debt issued in the future.”

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Source: NBCNews