Russia fails to sell stake in gold miner UGC as no one bids at auction

Industry:    1 week ago

The Russian state failed to auction a stake in gold producer Uzhuralzoloto (UGC) ​it had seized last year, a state auction website showed on Monday, ‌saying that no one had submitted a bid.

A Russian court ruled last July that a majority stake in UGC, previously owned by businessman Konstantin Strukov, should be seized and transferred to the ​state, part of a wider pattern of nationalisations of assets of Russian ​companies.

The federal property management agency Rosimushchestvo put up Strukov’s assets ⁠for auction earlier this month, valuing them at 162.02 billion roubles ($2.22 billion). His ​former 67.2% stake in UGC – one of Russia’s top 10 gold miners – was valued ​at 140.43 billion roubles.

On Monday, the state auction website said the planned sale had failed.

“The bidding was declared invalid, as no applications for participation in the procedure were submitted at ​the end of the deadline for submitting applications,” the website said.

Rosimushchestvo said a ​new auction would begin on Tuesday, with the results to be announced on May 26.

It said ‌this ⁠would be a Dutch auction, where the price is gradually lowered until someone places a bid. This could lead to the price of the UGC stake being reduced by up to 50% from the initial asking price, it said.

Prosecutors moved ​last year to ​seize the stake ⁠owned by Strukov after they accused him and several others of obtaining their property “through corruption.” However, he is not in ​custody and has not been formally charged.

The Finance Ministry is ​putting up ⁠a number of confiscated assets for auction, hoping to replenish the federal treasury.

In January Russia managed to sell one of the country’s largest and most modern airports, Moscow’s Domodedovo, ⁠to ​a subsidiary of another airport in the capital, ​Sheremetyevo, for 66 billion roubles – just half of its starting price of 132.3 billion roubles.

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