* Energy magnate Vagit Alekperov's international strategy
sours
* Lukoil is one of last major Russian firms to retreat
from West
* Follows decades of rampant Russian investment across
the globe
* Russian outflows for overseas investment estimated at
$800 billion in 2000-2021
By Anna Hirtenstein and Dmitry Zhdannikov
LONDON, March 5 (Reuters) - In 2014, following Russia's
invasion of Crimea, the billionaire founder of Lukoil took a
fateful bet that cut against the advice of Vladimir Putin and
set him apart from other Russian tycoons.
Vagit Alekperov and other top Russian businessmen had been
urged by President Putin at a closed-door meeting in March of
that year, weeks after the invasion, to sell their assets in the
West or risk them being confiscated by authorities there,
according to two Lukoil sources familiar with the gathering.
After a few months of deliberation, though, Alekperov
decided to hold onto Lukoil's vast collection of international
interests, including oilfields, refineries and petrol stations,
even as many of his fellow magnates were selling up, the people
said.
At a meeting in the company's Moscow HQ, Alekperov told his
management team to scrap any plans to spin off or sell the
assets, assuring them the sheer size of Lukoil's global
portfolio effectively made it sanctions-proof, according to the
two sources who requested anonymity to discuss the sensitive
discussions, which haven't been previously reported.
Fast-forward 12 years, and Alekperov's international
strategy has soured.
The 75-year-old's bet that Washington would not impose
sanctions on Lukoil's assets, because of the disruption that
would cause to the global energy system, had held for more than
a decade, even after Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in
2022.
Yet his predictions ultimately failed to reckon with an
unpredictable U.S. president, Donald Trump, who imposed
sanctions on Lukoil in October as he tried to increase pressure
on Putin to negotiate a peace deal to end the war.
The measures made it impossible for Russia's top independent
oil producer to operate internationally and forced the company
into a fire sale of assets stretching across around 30
countries. The U.S. Treasury is overseeing the sale of the
portfolio, valued by Lukoil at $22 billion. Last week, it
extended the deadline for deals to be concluded to April 1.
The assets cost Lukoil around $40 billion to accumulate over
the past two decades but have depreciated over time, according
to the two company sources.
Lukoil didn't respond to a request for comment for this
article, while Reuters was unable to contact Alekperov directly.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov denounced the seizure of
assets owned by Russian companies.
"Property rights violations in Western countries undermine
trust in the reliability of these countries not only for Russian
businesses affected by sanctions but also for businesses in
other countries," Peskov told Reuters.
Lukoil is one of the last major Russian companies to retreat
from the West, and the asset sales mark a turbulent final
chapter in a story spanning decades of rampant Russian
investment overseas following the collapse of the Soviet Union.
Between 2000 to 2021, Russia saw capital outflows of $800
billion, with most of this money used for investments abroad,
according to the country's central bank and Reuters
calculations.
Last year, total Russian investments abroad stood at just
$193 billion, central bank data shows.
"Speaking of the West, the damage done to us won't be
forgotten for a long time," Andrei Kostin, head of Russian state
bank VTB, told Reuters in a December interview.
"It will be a very long process - both letting Russians back
to the West and the return of assets to the Russian companies."
VTB, which was forced to relinquish its network of
businesses in America and Western Europe in 2022, has estimated
its sanctions-related losses amount to $8 billion.
PUTIN: THAT IS EXACTLY HOW IT TURNED OUT
The new round of U.S. sanctions - including those targeting
Lukoil, which accounts for about 2% of global oil output, as
well as Russian state oil giant Rosneft - has caused some
disruption to Russian flows, according to analysts, traders and
shipping data. They say those measures, and the anticipation of
the U.S. strikes on Iran, have helped push up oil prices in
recent months.
"During the Biden administration, there was always the
tension between reducing Russia's energy revenue and not
destabilising international energy markets," said Geoffrey
Pyatt, who was assistant secretary of state for energy resources
under Trump's predecessor Joe Biden and is now a senior managing
director at consultancy firm McLarty Associates.
"I give the Trump administration credit for biting the
bullet. And the fact is that they were able to implement these
sweeping sanctions against the two largest Russian entities and
it didn't cause a spike in crude prices."
In Putin's 2023 State of the Union speech - his first since
the full-scale invasion of Ukraine a year earlier triggered new
U.S. and EU sanctions - the president stressed that he had
warned Russian businessmen that the West would eventually
deprive them of their assets.
"And that is exactly how it turned out to be," he said.
Two decades earlier, the Russian leader had played a central
role in promoting Lukoil's international ambitions. In 2003,
flanked by Alekperov and U.S. Senator Chuck Schumer, Putin
inaugurated a Lukoil gas station in Manhattan, New York.
Now Lukoil's international empire is on the block, with
bidders for the portfolio including the U.S. oil major Chevron ( CVX )
and Texas-based Quantum Capital Group, American private equity
fund Carlyle Group ( CG ) and Saudi investor Midad Energy.
If all the sales close, Lukoil would be transformed
overnight from a global energy giant to a domestic producer. Its
earnings would fall by about 20%, according to analysts at
Renaissance Capital and Sinara Bank.
The company has already lost nearly half of its market value
from its peak in 2020 and is now worth almost $50 billion.
CHELSEA FC, NY YANKEES, MEGAYACHTS
It's been a rollercoaster ride.
Lukoil was one of many Russian companies and businessmen
funnelling huge investments abroad as they spent cash they built
up during a commodities boom in the 2000s when rapid economic
growth in China boosted prices for many raw materials.
Russian investors snapped up refineries, steel plants,
sports teams such as Chelsea Football Club and New York Yankees,
and hundreds of properties in Europe and America. So-called
oligarchs - led by the likes of metals magnates Alexei
Mordashov, Oleg Deripaska, Alisher Usmanov and Roman Abramovich
- took their place among the global elite with yachts and villas
in exclusive locales such as Billionaires' Bay in Cap d'Antibes
on the French Riviera and Italy's Sardinia.
The annexation of Crimea in 2014, and the eruption of the
wider conflict in Ukraine in February 2022, ended the Russian
foray into the global economy. Much of the West is no longer
welcome to Russian business. The United States, European Union
and Britain have imposed multiple waves of sanctions.
Many Russian companies have sold off interests at knock-down
prices to avoid face possible nationalization and asset freezes,
or have written them down.
Russia's largest lender Sberbank, for example, unloaded its
European subsidiaries at a discount. Steelmaker Evraz sold its
North American mills, which it had bought for $4.6 billion in
2007-2008, for $500 million last year.
Abramovich was forced to sell Chelsea Football Club when the
Ukraine war erupted in 2022. A portion of the $5.7 billion of
proceeds was put towards club investment and the remainder was
frozen by Britain and earmarked for aid to Ukraine.
As of November 2025, an estimated 28 billion euros ($33
billion) worth of private Russian assets lie frozen in the
EU, according to the European Commission.
Some Russian companies have sought to expand in friendlier
nations. Sberbank and VTB operate branches in India and smaller
Russian banks have announced plans to begin working in China.
MTS Bank received a license to open a branch in Abu Dhabi in
2023, but UAE authorities revoked it due to sanctions.
VTB boss Kostin told Reuters that Russian companies still
wanted to expand abroad but the focus had shifted towards the
so-called global south of emerging markets, adding that many of
his colleagues were thinking about commodities processing in
China.
Asked about this shift, Kremlin spokesman Peskov said:
"Naturally, Russian companies will seek out reliable and
predictable options. As a state, we will protect the interests
of our companies."
(Additional reporting by Timothy Gardner in Washington; Writing
by Anna Hirtenstein; Editing by Guy Faulconbridge, Simon Webb
and Pravin Char)