Europe’s biggest companies have suffered at least €100 billion in direct losses from their operations in Russia since President Vladimir Putin’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine last year.
According to a report obtained, a survey of 600 European groups’ annual reports and 2023 financial statements shows that 176 companies have recorded asset impairments, foreign exchange-related charges, and other one-off expenses as a result of the sale, closure, or reduction of Russian businesses.
The aggregate figure does not include the war’s indirect macroeconomic impacts such as higher energy and commodities costs. The war has also delivered a profit boost for oil and gas groups and defense companies.
Moscow’s decision to seize control of the Russian businesses of gas importers Fortum and Uniper in April, followed by the expropriation of Danone and Carlsberg last month, suggests more pain lies ahead, according to analysts.
The report noted that more than 50 per cent of the 1,871 European-owned entities in Russia before the war are still operating in the country, according to data compiled by the Kyiv School of Economics. European companies still present in Russia include Italy’s UniCredit, Austria’s Raiffeisen, Switzerland’s Nestlé, and the UK’s Unilever.
“Even if a company lost a lot of money leaving Russia, those who stay risk much bigger losses,” said Nabi Abdullaev, partner at strategic consultancy Control Risks. “It turns out that cut and run was the best strategy for companies deciding what to do at the start of the war. The faster you left, the lower your loss.”
It stated that the heaviest costs of withdrawal are concentrated in a few exposed sectors.
Those with the biggest write-downs and charges are oil and gas groups, where three companies alone — BP, Shell, and TotalEnergies — reported combined charges of €40.6 billion.
The losses were far outweighed by higher oil and gas prices, which helped these groups report bumper aggregate profits of about €95 billion ($104 billion) last year.
Utilities took a direct hit of €14.7 billion, while industrial companies, including carmakers, have suffered a €13.6 billion blow. Financial companies including banks, insurers, and investment firms, have recorded €17.5 billion in write-downs and other charges.
Looking at global investment flows into Russia, “even if Europeans were the only investors there, which they are not, the country would account for just 3.5 per cent of their total outward investments,” he said.
According to the report, BP reported a $25.5 billion charge, announcing three days after the invasion that it would sell its 19.75 per cent stake in state-owned oil group Rosneft.
It took TotalEnergies longer to report a total cost of $14.8 billion. The French energy group has yet to write down its 20 per cent stake in the Yamal LNG project. Shell took a $4.1 billion charge, while Norwegian oil and gas group Equinor and Austria’s OMV have reported €1 billion and €2.5 billion respectively.
German group Wintershall Dea in January said the Kremlin’s expropriation of its Russia business had wiped €2 billion of cash from its bank accounts. In turn, Wintershall’s owner BASF wrote down its stake in the energy explorer by €6.5 billion.
Uniper, which was bailed out by the German state last year, booked €5.7 billion in impairments, while Finland’s Fortum took a €5.3 billion hit.
Eleven carmakers took a combined €6.4 billion in charges. Renault wrote off €2.3 billion after selling its Moscow plant and the stake in Russia’s Avtovaz in May 2022.
Volkswagen reported a €2 billion write-down and in May Moscow approved the sale of VW’s local assets, including a plant employing 4,000 people, which were still valued at Rbs111.3 billion (€1.5 billion) last year, according to company disclosures.
In the financial sector, France’s Société Générale threw in the towel in April 2022, selling Rosbank and its insurance activities to Vladimir Potanin, an ally of Putin, taking a €3.1 billion hit in the process. But only a handful of the 45 Western banks with Russian subsidiaries have exited the country, partly because of constraints imposed by Moscow.
Raiffeisen, still the largest Western bank in the country, has taken €1 billion in write-downs and other charges. The lender has said it is exploring a sale of its Russian unit, which it values at €1 billion currently.
UniCredit, which has vowed to find a buyer for its local business, has accounted for a €1.3 billion hit, while Italy’s Intesa Sanpaolo took a €1.4 billion charge.
“The groups still operating in Russia are taking a high-risk gamble, said Anna Vlasyuk, a research fellow at KSE. The tighter exit rules introduced by Moscow since the start of the war have made expropriation likely and extracting any dividends out of these businesses is almost impossible,” she said.