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Ruben Vardanian, former Troika Dialog CEO: a grumbling optimist

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  • Ruben Vardanian, former Troika Dialog CEO: a grumbling optimist

    Ruben Vardanian, former Troika Dialog CEO: a grumbling optimist

    Jack Farchy
    ©Anton Belitskiy


    For a man once called the poster boy of Russian capitalism, Ruben
    Vardanian is remarkably relaxed about the crisis erupting around him.
    Sitting in his office in one of Moscow's premier office complexes,
    which he also owns, surrounded by deal trophies and other symbols of
    his success, Mr Vardanian's response to the rouble's collapse and the
    slide towards recession is typically Russian: it has been worse.

    `It's all relative,' he says, before counting off a list of Russian
    economic crises of the past quarter century since the collapse of the
    Soviet Union. `Looking back for 25 years being in this country I can
    tell you, there are always challenges.'

    The 46-year-old Mr Vardanian knows that better than most. The former
    chief executive of Troika Dialog, one of Russia's leading investment
    banks for the past two decades, has had a front-row seat for each of
    the country's economic crises.

    To some extent, Mr Vardanian can afford to be laid back. Troika was
    sold in 2011 to state-owned Sberbank, Russia's largest lender; he
    later stepped down from day-to-day work at the company, although he
    remains an adviser to Sberbank's chief executive.

    Some of his former colleagues and competitors may envy his timing:
    anal - ysts expect a sharp decline in investment banks' revenues in
    Russia in 2014 as equity and bond issuance has all but ground to a
    halt amid western sanctions and a tumble in valuations. Many western
    banks are relocating staff out of Moscow.

    But Mr Vardanian rejects the idea that Russia has become a wasteland
    for investment bankers.

    As in 1991, when the break-up of the Soviet Union triggered an
    enormous political and economic upheaval in Russia, the country is now
    at another such inflection point, he says.

    He remembers 1991 well, as a young man just in his twenties: `Sitting
    in Moscow, I said [to myself], I have two options. One, the Soviet
    Union will stay, we will go back and I will emigrate. The second
    choice is that Russia would build capitalism. This is a huge
    opportunity.

    `Now 24 years later I am sitting with you and we're talking about the
    same thing.'

    Just as he did in 1991, Mr Vardanian is backing Russia to choose the
    market-friendly path.

    `Yes there will be ups and downs, yes there will be situations where
    people will be upset and nervous, like happened many times in the
    past, but in the end it is unstoppable [?.?.?.?] in 20 years' time
    there will continue to be a market economy in Russia.'

    That may seem like optimism to some in Moscow at the moment. Vladimir
    Putin's return in 2012 to a third term as president has coincided with
    a sharp rise in the influence of the state in Russian business.

    The trend that has only been exacerbated by the latest economic
    crisis, with Vladimir Yevtushenkov, one of the country's wealthiest
    men, being arrested late last year and his oil company seized and
    renationalised. Even though Mr Yevtushenkov was recently released, the
    case has sent a chill through Moscow's business circles.

    Many Russians of Mr Vardanian's generation, who came of age in the
    1990s and surfed the wave of Russia's great opening up to the west,
    are moving to Europe or North America. `Some of my friends want to
    leave the country, some of them send their kids outside,' he concedes.

    Slipping into Russian for the first and only time in our interview, he
    describes himself as a vorchashcy optimist ' a grumbling optimist.

    There would be no comfort in saying that the country had no future and
    then being proved right, he says, as the whole world would be affected
    in such a scenario. The idea that one could emigrate to Italy or Spain
    and `drink good wine' free from the stresses of home would only be a
    `big illusion'.

    For all that, the path he has chosen suggests a recognition that the
    boom times for Russian capitalism of the late 1990s and early 2000s
    are unlikely to return.

    Having run Troika for more than a decade before selling it, emerging
    with a fortune estimated at $850m by Forbes, Mr Vardanian is throwing
    his considerable energies and charm into the world of charity.

    Just as he was in Russian investment banking in the 1990s, he is also
    a pioneer in Russian philanthropy.

    `Today in Russia is the first generation which has wealth, which needs
    to leave something for the next generation?.?.?.?It's the first time
    for 100 years. In 1917 it stopped, and basically you didn't have
    anything to leave for your kids.'

    Official statistics, he points out, say there are 230,000 Russians
    earning more than $1m a year. `It's not ultra-oligarchs but if you
    have a million dollars it's already big money. Do you want to spend
    this money now, or do some charity? It's a challenging question.'

    As with investment banking, Mr Vardanian has jumped into the world of
    charity with both feet. He is providing education and services for
    wealthy Russians who are wondering what to do with their millions,
    setting up a business to provide services to charities as well as
    engaging enthusiastically in philanthropy. He bridles at the word,
    though. `Philanthropy usually means you're giving money and forgetting
    about it. I am quite actively involved in the management decisions.
    It's like capitalism .?.?.?Keeping all this pressure, being a tough
    investment banker, but delivering results for charities.'

    He has only so much time for the pledge made popular among
    billionaires by Bill Gates and Warren Buffett to give at least half
    their wealth to charity. It recently received its first Russian
    adherent in Vladimir Potanin, CEO and part owner of Norilsk Nickel.

    Mr Vardanian believes that, in a country like Russia, it is not enough
    to wait until after you die to hand over the money, as the pledge
    allows.

    `In our case I believe some of the people need to spend this wealth
    now, to make a dramatic transformation. Because in our countries we
    need these changes much more dramatically compared to more developed
    countries.'

    His four children will inherit only property. He and his wife will
    spend the rest of their wealth on charitable projects during their
    lifetimes, he says.

    Many of his projects focus on Armenia, the country of his childhood
    and parents ' although he is quick to say that he does not hold an
    Armenian passport and has no political ambitions.

    He is spending an estimated $80m to build what he says is the world's
    longest cable car to the ninth-century Tatev monastery in southern
    Armenia, as well as to restore the monastery. He has built a school in
    Dilijan in the north that he hopes, as a member of the United World
    Colleges network, will help open up the world to young Armenians.

    He is planning a project to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the
    1915 Armenian genocide by paying tribute to the people and
    organisations that helped to save Armenian lives.

    Mr Vardanian tells a story of how his grandfather as a child was saved
    from the genocide by American missionaries who ran an orphanage.

    `I became successful and today I can have a discussion with you about
    my wealth because 100 years ago four missionaries went to a crazy
    place where there was a war and saved 150 kids,' he says. `Now I'm the
    rich person, I want to give back.'


    http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/d34d3ae8-89bf-11e4-8daa-00144feabdc0.html#ixzz3Nrc7xitW

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