July 7 Moscow Business Summit - Media Coverage (English)
Obama Charts Path to Bolster Trade
08 July 2009By Nadia Popova / The Moscow Times
U.S. President Barack Obama on Tuesday said making good on a Kremlin promise to promote the rule of law would be a vital step toward boosting trade between U.S. and Russian companies.
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said economic ties could soon improve because he had received assurances from the Obama administration that it would prioritize the scrapping of the Jackson-Vanik amendment, a major Soviet-era trade barrier between the countries.
The heads of U.S. and Russian companies, meanwhile, griped at a business conference about the challenges of working in each other’s countries.
“We want Russia to be selling us goods, and we want Russia to be buying from us,” Obama told the Moscow Business Summit co-organized by the American Chamber of Commerce in Russia. “Our fortunes are linked, and yet so much potential remains untapped.”
Annual trade between the countries totals $36 billion, which is about 1 percent of U.S. trade with the rest of the world.
The percentage has remained “virtually unchanged since the Cold War,” Obama said. “That $36 billion is about the same as our trade with Thailand, a country with less than half the population of Russia. Surely we can do better.”
But a condition for better trade relations is Russia’s observance of the rule of law, he said.
“We have to promote transparency, accountability [and] rule of law, on which investments and economic growth depend,” Obama said. “And so I welcome very much President Medvedev’s initiatives to promote the rule of law and ensure a mature and effective legal system as a condition for sustained economic growth.”
Medvedev urged business executives to look beyond Russia’s oil and gas.
“It is important that our American partners not only work in the oil and gas sector … but also invest in other spheres, both in those that are traditional for Russia and in high-technology,” he said.
In a sign that Obama is ready to encourage trade, Lavrov told Vesti state television that the U.S. administration intended to drop the 1975 Jackson-Vanik amendment, which has prevented Washington from granting most-favored nation status to countries that have non-market economies and restrict emigration.
“President Obama has acknowledged that this is, in general, the problem of the American side now,” Lavrov said about the amendment. “President Obama understands all the awkwardness of the situation, and has assured [us] that the dropping of the amendment will be one of the priorities of his administration.”
Russia should scrap visa rules for U.S. citizens in exchange for lifting Jackson-Vanik, said Alexander Shokhin, head of the Russian Union of Entrepreneurs and Industrialists, the other co-organizer of the conference. Calls to Shokhin’s cell phone for further comment went unanswered later in the day.
Russian and U.S. executives held intensive talks for several hours at the conference before Obama and Medvedev arrived. “We talked a lot about high-tech, innovation, investment opportunities, transportation, energy,” Andrew Somers, president of the American Chamber of Commerce, said after the conference. “What we focused on particularly was innovation and high-tech.”
Executives complained about problems with the investment climate in each other’s countries.
“One thing — and I would call that the big white elephant in the room — is the foundation which we all need to have successful business, and that is the rule of law. And that’s not negotiable,” Alcoa chief executive Klaus Kleinfeld told the conference.
On the Russian side, Vladimir Lisin, chairman of Novolipetsk Steel, which runs three mills in Pennsylvania, complained about new U.S. legislation that toughened certification rules for finished steel products from outside the United States.
“The results are the following: Two of our plants have been forced to halve production, 600 people have been sent on the street,” Lisin said. “We think it is an absolutely inadequate measure to support industries because jobs are being lost. We think U.S. authorities must review and amend this legislation.”
The criticism on the part of private Russian firms was echoed by state-run companies. “Today we heard reproach aimed at the U.S. administration that Russian companies … are clearly being discriminated against in the United States,” Vneshekonombank head Vladimir Dmitriyev told reporters.
Billionaire Victor Vekselberg, who chairs the TNK-BP board, said the time was ripe to sign an agreement on protecting mutual investments in both countries.
In an attempt to lighten the mood, Obama mentioned Russia’s sale of Alaska to the United States in his speech. “Along the way, you gave us a pretty good deal on Alaska. Thank you,” Obama said.
Tsar Alexander II sold Alaska to the United States in 1867 for $7.2 million in gold to help Russia’s cash-strapped treasury. The deal is regarded by some Russians as a national disgrace, especially in light of the gold and oil subsequently discovered there.
In meetings with Medvedev and Putin, Obama will seek an improved atmosphere for U.S. investment. That would benefit both nations, but the list of sticking points is long
When President Barack Obama arrives in Moscow for a highly anticipated summit from July 6-8, he will find a U.S.-Russia business relationship that has barely taken off despite exceedingly hopeful beginnings 17 years ago after the breakup of the Soviet Union. Notwithstanding a few notable ventures, the U.S. is now only the eighth-largest foreign investor in Russia.
The summit is intended to activate what U.S. Vice-President Joe Biden called a "reset" of relations between the former superpower rivals after antagonism deepened during the latter two years or so of the George W. Bush Administration. Toward that end, Obama is scheduled to spend some 10 hours with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev in addition to a 90-minute breakfast with the country's über-influential Prime Minister, Vladimir Putin.
While the Presidents are to initial agreements on arms control, transit of military supplies to Afghanistan, and nuclear energy, they also are supposed to drop by a simultaneous meeting of U.S. and Russian business leaders at Manezh Central Exhibition Hall. Yet on the business side, there is little sign of a thaw in the apprehensions of U.S. companies about the Russian investment environment.
Indeed, analysts say one of the main summit agenda items remains establishing a better atmosphere between the two countries. "It's far more important to clean up the atmosphere, to get rid of all those sticky fumes of anti-Americanism," said Pavel K. Baev, a research associate at the International Peace Research Institute in Oslo.
georgia is a major area of disagreement
In recent weeks, Putin has welcomed investment by Shell (RDSA) and France's Total (TOT) in difficult natural gas fields. But energy companies are attentive to the recent experiences of BP (BP) and Exxon Mobil (XOM), both of which have longstanding investments in the country. Exxon Mobil, for instance, has continued to be thwarted in its plans to export natural gas to China from a major investment in the offshore Sakhalin-I field because Gazprom has insisted that the gas be sold at lower prices in Russia.
Russia's renewed need for investment capital amid its sharp recession may lessen the likelihood of such confrontations. "When times are not so good, the opportunities are there," said a senior executive at a major Western oil company with investments in Russia, who spoke not for attribution. "The nervousness you have is, what happens in three or four years' time, when the price of oil is back above $100 a barrel? When the price of oil goes back up, it's as high-risk as ever."
Energy's tight connection with foreign policy is one of the most stubborn points of conflict between the two countries. Russia remains deeply hostile toward Georgia some 11 months after the two nations went to war—a conflict that has affected U.S.-Russian relations since Georgia is a key U.S. ally as a transit route for a giant oil pipeline connecting the Caspian Sea and Mediterranean. The U.S. seeks to deepen its ties with the Caspian Sea countries, while Moscow wants the U.S. to limit such engagement, viewing the region as a Russian preserve.
In addition, Moscow bristles at U.S. attempts to curtail Russian dominance of the natural gas supply to Europe. Russia now supplies some 25% of Europe's natural gas. The U.S. and Russia have squared off on the issue by backing rival natural gas supply projects that lead into Europe. Russia proposes a pipeline called South Stream, while the U.S. has traditionally backed a rival line bypassing Russia, called Nabucco, that proponents see as a way to diversify Europe's natural gas supply.
no sign of attitude adjustment
Some analysts had thought that the impact of the global financial crisis would cause Russia to moderate some of its foreign policy objectives, especially when those objectives include Moscow's plans to use its oil and gas as a way to extend Russian influence abroad. But there is no sign that either Russia or the U.S. will retreat on their positions concerning energy. "If anything, the crisis gives Russia more leverage in its region. It hasn't in any way changed Russia's attitude toward the outside world," said Angela Stent, a Russia expert at Georgetown University.
With Russia suffering heavily from the global economic crisis, it has a clear interest in welcoming greater foreign investment. U.S. investment could be especially beneficial in high-technology sectors, which Russia's leaders say they are keen to boost in order to reduce Russia's overdependence on oil and gas. For example, Rusnano, a state corporation that seeks to develop Russia's fledgling nanotechnology industry, has recently indicated plans to raise $1 billion with the help of Silicon Valley companies.
Another long-term Russia-U.S. goal is Russia's entry into the World Trade Organization. WTO entry would require the Russians to lower barriers to competition from abroad, and it would signal that Russia had matured as a player in the world economy. But Russia, concerned about the state of its battered domestic companies, now clearly wants to slow down the WTO process. In June the country effectively blew the whole idea out of the water when it unexpectedly announced that it was entering a customs union with Belarus and Kazakhstan. The Russians now want to enter the WTO only in conjunction with their customs-union partners. This new twist means Russia's accession to WTO has been put on hold for a very long time.
Deere, Boeing, and Pepsi ramp up
In non-energy areas of business, there will probably be some good news at the summit. Among U.S. commercial deals expected to be announced around the event are a $500 million Russian investment by John Deere & Co. (DE) in facilities to produce tractors and combines; a 50-50 joint venture between Boeing (BA) and Russian titanium producer VSMPO-Avisma (VSMO.RTS) to make parts for the 787 Dreamliner; and a $180 million investment by Pepsi (PEP) in a bottling plant in the Moscow region.
Still, it is European investors who have taken the lead in the areas of traditionally high investment in Russia. In energy, BP, Shell, and Total are the largest investors, with Exxon Mobil and ConocoPhillips (COP) the only significant U.S. players. Major investors in consumer products include European companies such as Ikea, Metro (MEOG.DE), Heineken (HEIN.AS), Renault (RENA.PA), and Telenor (TEL.F). (Those investments aren't always easy, though: Ikea just announced that it is halting further expansion in Russia for now because of administrative hassles and uncertainty.) U.S. investment—just 3.4% of foreign direct investment in Russia—is shallow.
A main worry of U.S. companies is a perceived failure of the Russian justice system to uphold the rights of investors and shareholders. "Medium-size companies—and I mean big medium-size companies—still have concerns about the rule of law," says Andrew Somers, president of the American Chamber of Commerce in Moscow. "So that's a competitive disadvantage for Russia. And until they straighten it out, it will continue to be."
LeVine is a correspondent in BusinessWeek's Washington bureau. Bush is BusinessWeek's Moscow bureau chief.
Summit may unlock Russia trade: U.S. business leader
Mon Jul 6, 2009 6:10am EDT
MOSCOW (Reuters) - U.S. businesses is ready to up investment in Russia if the Russia-U.S. summit this week makes progress on geopolitical issues, and if Russia continues to improve its rule of law, the American Chamber of Commerce in Moscow said on Monday.
"If we have success on the geopolitical side of the summit we are going to see much more investment by U.S. companies," Andrew Somers, president of the American Chamber of Commerce in Russia, told Reuters financial television.
U.S. President Barack Obama is visiting Russia for the first time since his election to meet Russian leader Dmitry Medvedev for two days of talks on a number of issues, including a framework deal on arms cuts.
Business leaders traveling with Obama want to use the visit to boost trade and investment. Russian trade with the United States was just $36 billion in 2008, the same amount as with Poland.
"There are significant investments that are continuing in Russia by U.S. companies," Somers said.
Three major deals will be announced during the summit by U.S. companies, Somers said without specifying which deals.
U.S. agricultural machinery maker John Deere will invest $500 million in the next six years in Russia, while soft drink giant PepsiCo will boost investment to $4 billion from $3 billion in the next three years. Aircraft maker Boeing plans to announce a joint venture with the world's largest titanium producer, Russia's VSMPO-Avisma, on Tuesday, industry sources told Reuters on Monday without giving further details.
However, weak rule of law and some non-Russian companies' battles in Russian courts against local opponents are also of concern for U.S. businessmen. They expect to use the summit to press Moscow for better operating conditions for Western companies..
"We hope that president Medvedev will be able to follow through on his continuous campaign to improve the rule of law. I think this is a single biggest inhibitor to investment by U.S. companies their concern about the rule of law," he said.
Somers noted that strategic investors have not fled the Russia, whose economy is facing its first contraction in a decade and are staying despite zig-zags on the stock market.
"I think that is a sign people who understand the market have faith in the long term," Somers said.
The lobbyist said there are a lot of opportunities for U.S. business to enhance activities in Russia, particularly in energy sector, automobiles, consumer goods and retail.
"There is a large opportunity in the energy sector and I think this opportunity will be enhanced if this is geopolitical success of the summit," Somers said, adding U.S. technology could be applied to develop Russia's oil reserves.
The latest survey made by American Chamber of Commerce in Russia has shown the situation is still very bleak but there are signs of recovery in different sectors, Somers said.
"There are many of the companies here particularly in the consumer sector, with their gross sales in roubles up 15-20 percent. It is a good sign," Somers said.
(Reporting by Dmitry Sergeyev and Kiryl Sukhotski; Editing by Andrew Macdonald)
Business comments from Obama-Medvedev summit
Reuters, Tue Jul 7, 2009 10:14am EDT
Following are remarks by Russian and U.S. policymakers and company executives about business ties between the two countries during President Barack Obama's two-day trip to Moscow.
URSULA BURNS, CEO OF XEROX
"Bureaucracy remains a significant barrier to doing business in this part of the world (Russia)."
VLADIMIR DMITRIEV, HEAD OF RUSSIAN STATE BANK VEB
"Today we heard a reproach aimed at the American administration, voiced by Russian companies, who cited the governors of the states where they are working... They are clearly being discriminated against in the United States."
"I don't want to say it is a trend ... but there are developments that cannot be called anything other than protectionism ... If there are concerns among businesses, you have to take this seriously and look for a solution."
U.S. COMMERCE SECRETARY GARY LOCKE
Locke met top U.S. executives on Monday.
"They (U.S. firms) have remarked that they have made great progress, that there can be great economic returns here in Russia but you have to be patient.
"America's high ethical standards of conduct can still lead to success... But they (U.S. businessmen) emphasized the need for greater predictability, stability, transparency and the rule of law."
KLAUS KLEINFELD, CEO OF ALCOA
"One thing, and I would call that a big white elephant in the room, is the foundation which we all need to have to have successful business, and that is the rule of law. And that's not negotiable."
SAMUEL ALLEN, CHAIRMAN OF DEERE & CO
"We need the confidence that things are going to remain stable, that the ground rules are going to remain stable.
"I believe in the long run that is what the government will try to do but, at this point in time, things aren't as stable was we would like to see... It makes us hesitant at times..."
ANDREW SOMERS, PRESIDENT OF THE AMERICAN CHAMBER OF COMMERCE IN RUSSIA
"If we have success on the geopolitical side of the summit we are going to see much more investments by U.S. companies.
"We hope that President Medvedev will be able to follow through on his continuous campaign to improve the rule of law. I think this is a single biggest inhibitor to investment by U.S. companies, their concern about the rule of law."
JOHN CONROY, BAKER & MCKENZIE
"There are hurdles (in Russia-U.S. business relations). What is good is that we are having this kind of dialogue ... government and business working together to make sure that hurdles, whether they are massive or challenging, are addressed."
VAGIT ALEKPEROV, CO-OWNER OF OIL COMPANY LUKOIL WITH U.S. CONOCOPHILLIPS
"Obama evokes sympathy. He looks to the future. We have a feeling he wants to improve relations with Russia. We welcome him and many are expecting decisive action from him."
VLADIMIR LISIN, OWNER OF STEEL COMPANY NLMK, WHICH OWNS THREE STEEL PLANTS IN THE UNITED STATES
Lisin complained about new U.S. legislations on tougher certification rules for finished steel products from outside the United States.
"The results are the following -- two of our plants have been forced to halve production, 600 people have been sent on the street. We think it is an absolutely inadequate measure to support industries as jobs are being lost.
"We think U.S. authorities must review and amend this legislation."
IGOR ZYUZIN, OWNER OF STEEL AND COAL COMPANY MECHEL, WHICH OWNS U.S. BLUESTONE COAL
"The new administration has announced substantial restrictions on activities of coal firms in the United States... This raises serious concerns from coal companies and authorities of certain U.S. states."
VICTOR VEKSELBERG, RUSSIAN OIL AND METALS MAGNATE
"The level of (Russia-U.S. business) cooperation is shamefully low. We should be ashamed of the size of mutual investments ... It should be a strong positive signal (from Obama) to all business to re-examine the possibilities that the two countries have."
OLEG DERIPASKA, CO-OWNER OF RUSSIAN Aluminum COMPANY RUSAL
"The results of the summit should be measured not so much by the number of agreements and memoranda signed, but by a change in atmosphere.
"We must distinguish between true national interests and past decisions that are a product of bureaucracy, special interests and outdated mentality."
NEIL DUFFIN, EXXONMOBIL PROJECT DEVELOPMENT HEAD
"We want the (Russian) authorities to make amendments to the subsoil law. We always have discussions around that. It is not easy but hopefully we will make some breakthrough."
(Editing by Dan Lalor)
by Anna Smolchenko
MOSCOW (AFP) – US President Barack Obama on Tuesday said the United States and Russia had to boost lacklustre trade volumes as business leaders sought to reap the benefits from his drive to revive political ties.
Obama addressed a business forum staged in parallel to his two day visit to Russia, agreeing with complaints from Russian tycoons that bilateral trade had nowhere near reached its full potential.
"Total trade between our two countries is just 36 billion dollars," Obama said in a speech to the forum alongside Russian President Dmitry Medvedev. "America's trade with Russia is only one percent of all our trade in the world. A percentage virtually unchanged since the Cold War... Surely we can do better."
He said his aim of resetting relations between Russia and the United States has to be more than "just security or dismantling weapons."
"We need to make it easier for American companies to invest in Russia and make it easier for Russian companies to invest in the US."
Medvedev, who spoke first, agreed it was necessary to promote the "positive mood" of business leaders from the two countries.
Viktor Vekselberg, a billionaire tycoon and head of the Renova group, told the forum that while there were some positive examples in Russia-US business relations, cooperation has not become systematic yet.
"We are going around in circles all the time. Every time, US business has to discover Russia for itself anew and vice versa," he said.
Even five years ago however a business forum on US-Russian mutual investment would have been "out of place," he said.
Bilateral trade turnover is "despicably low, while (the amount of) mutual investment is simply shameful," Vekselberg said.
His fellow tycoons expressed similar views.
"The tensions of the recent times have not allowed us to carry out large projects in oil and gas," said Vagit Alekperov, head of Russia's largest private oil company Lukoil.
He poured praise on Obama, calling him a forward-looking man. "Today many expect more decisive action from him," Alekperov added.
Mikhail Prokhorov, Russia's richest man, declined to comment about his expectations for the future of Russian-US ties, but indicated he was optimistic.
"We do not live by expectations. We live in real life."
Despite several high-profile acquisitions in the United States, Russian businesses have long complained of barriers in that country, while US firms say corruption and bureaucracy sour the business climate in Russia.
Steel tycoon Vladimir Lisin said the US government offered "absolutely inadequate support" for companies in the metals sector.
Obama's two-day visit to Russia has seen over 1.5 billion dollars' worth of deals, including a commitment by soft drinks company PepsiCo to invest a billion dollars into its Russian operations over the next three years.
US farm machinery company John Deere has said it will invest 500 million dollars in the country over the coming years.
On Monday, President Dmitry Medvedev and Obama agreed to create a high-level commission to boost economic and trade ties.
That commission would be similar to the so-called Gore-Chernomyrdin commission that promoted bilateral ties in the 1990s and was named after Vice President Al Gore and Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin, officials have said.
Russian Economics Minister Elvira Nabiullina said the new commission will allow the countries "to considerably improve the dynamics of our trade relations and our investment cooperation."
"We believe it's high time to invest in Russia," she said.
Vladimir Yakunin, head of Russian Railways, injected a note of sober realism however, saying geopolitics will always be a factor in international affairs and will therefore affect businesses.
"So companies should not relax," he said.
One executive, who asked not to be named, was sceptical about the ambitions. "It's a bit of a deja vu... nothing has changed. The question is, is it going to be just a reset or a real change