News

The US has imposed its most severe level of sanctions on Sberbank, Russia’s largest financial institution, and Alfa-Bank, the country’s biggest private bank, escalating its economic punishment of Moscow in response to atrocities committed by Russian forces in Ukraine.

The announcement on Wednesday of “full blocking sanctions”, which prevent the lenders from transacting with any US institutions or individuals, came after top US officials including President Joe Biden warned this week that they were planning to impose harsher restrictions on Russia.

A senior US official said the latest measures came in response to “the sickening brutality in Bucha”, a city near the capital Kyiv where gruesome images of the bodies of Ukrainian civilians have emerged in recent days, indicating a possible massacre by Russian soldiers.

The US also imposed sanctions on Vladimir Putin’s two adult daughters, Ekaterina Tikhonova and Maria Vorontsova, foreign minister Sergei Lavrov’s wife and daughter, and members of Russia’s Security Council including former president Dmitry Medvedev and Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin.

In addition, the US said it would prohibit any new investments in Russia by America, and reveal new blocking sanctions of large Russian state-owned enterprises on Thursday.

The new restrictions on Sberbank and Alfa mean that the two Russian lenders are no longer able to transact with any US institution or individual in any currency. Immediately after the invasion, the US had prohibited any debt or equity transactions with Alfa and Sberbank, but it is now imposing “full blocking sanctions”, which involve much stricter curbs.

“This is the most severe action we can take in terms of financial measures,” the US official said. “And in practice, the history of sanctions is when we impose full-blocking sanctions on [a] financial institution, the rest of the world, even in other jurisdictions that have not yet imposed a full block, they respect the regime. So there tends to be a multiplier effect.”

The official added that the US and EU had chosen to target Putin’s daughters because they believed they were helping shield the Russian president’s wealth.

“We believe that many of Putin’s assets are hidden with family members and that’s why we’re targeting them,” he added.

The UK government on Wednesday also announced additional sanctions against Putin’s regime, including full asset freezes against Sberbank.

The measures, which foreign secretary Liz Truss said marked “the toughest sanctions yet”, included a ban on imports of Russian iron and steel products alongside an outright ban on new outward investment to Russia.

The UK also imposed sanctions on a further eight individuals linked to key Russian industries including Andrey Akimov, chief executive of Gazprombank and the founder and chief executive of Novatek, Leonid Mikhelson.

The US and European allies had hoped that the initial burst of hefty sanctions they imposed in the wake of Russia’s invasion in late February — including cutting off Moscow’s access to its foreign reserves by banning transactions with its central bank — would be sufficient to isolate Russia financially without excessive spillovers to the rest of the global economy.

But they have been forced to consider additional targets as the conflict has worn on, widening their net to include companies and individuals in third countries continuing to do business with Russian entities and sharpening their enforcement of existing sanctions.

Edward Fishman, a former Russia and Europe sanctions lead at the state department, called Wednesday’s measures “the most significant sanctions taken since the [Russian] central bank sanctions” imposed in late February.

“We’re headed towards Iran-style sanctions,” he added, referring to the decades-long measures against Tehran beginning in 1979. “This is a conveyor belt and it only leads in one direction.”

Articles You May Like

Top Wall Street analysts favor these stocks for attractive long-term potential
PREPA parties remain far apart according to disclosures
University of Arizona sets first bond sale after negative rating outlooks
Reeves warned to tread cautiously as investors await fiscal plans
Texas Capital beefs up public finance team with five hires