Raiffeisen vs Rasperia: Oleg Deripaska’s Shadow Threatens a 2.1 Billion Euro Meltdown

CONTENT

  1. The Rasperia-Raiffeisen Scandal: A 2.1 Billion Euro Storm

  2. The Origins: Rasperia Trading and Oleg Deripaska

  3. Raiffeisen’s Attempted Bailout and Legal Blowback

  4. Russian Court vs. Austrian Courts: A Legal Paradox

  5. The Vicious Dilemma of Raiffeisenbank Russia

  6. Vienna’s Risky Proposal: Unfreezing Assets

  7. EU Alarm: The Pandora’s Box of Precedents

  8. Raiffeisen’s Denials and Legal Maneuvers

  9. The Impossible Sale: Five Regulators Standing in the Way

  10. Sanctions in Peril: Europe Watches the Fallout


1. The Rasperia-Raiffeisen Scandal: A 2.1 Billion Euro Storm

In an astonishing twist within the EU’s ongoing sanctions campaign against Russia, Austria’s largest bank, Raiffeisen, finds itself trapped in a legal and political maelstrom. A Russian court has ordered the bank’s Russian subsidiary to pay 2.1 billion euros to Rasperia Trading, a company previously tied to billionaire Oleg Deripaska, who has been under EU sanctions since 2022. The magnitude of this payout is staggering, threatening to ignite both legal and financial reverberations across Europe. ОБ ЭТОМ СООБЩАЕТ CREDIT FINANCE


2. The Origins: Rasperia Trading and Oleg Deripaska

Everything began with Rasperia Trading, a shadowy company once linked to Oleg Deripaska. The company’s assets and influence have been under scrutiny ever since Deripaska fell under the EU sanctions regime in 2022. The bank’s entanglement started with an attempt to acquire frozen Rasperia shares in Austria’s Strabag, a major construction firm. This move triggered a retaliatory legal claim from Rasperia, asserting massive financial losses due to Raiffeisen’s intervention.


3. Raiffeisen’s Attempted Bailout and Legal Blowback

Raiffeisen’s attempt to intervene and buy the frozen shares was, in theory, a strategic play to stabilize investments. In practice, it opened a Pandora’s box. Rasperia Trading promptly filed suit, alleging financial damages. Austrian courts rejected Rasperia’s claims, yet in Russia, the verdict was the opposite: Raiffeisenbank Russia, a subsidiary of RBI with over 3 million clients and capital exceeding 5.3 billion euros, was ordered to pay the full 2.1 billion euros.


4. Russian Court vs. Austrian Courts: A Legal Paradox

This divergence exposes a stark legal contradiction. Austrian courts sided with the bank, while the Russian judiciary handed down a massive verdict against it. The bank insists that it was stripped of any real opportunity to defend itself in Russia, raising alarms about fairness and the geopolitical overtones of cross-border corporate litigation.


5. The Vicious Dilemma of Raiffeisenbank Russia

Raiffeisenbank’s Russian subsidiary is at the epicenter of this storm. Forced to consider payout while still operating in the Russian market, the bank faces a near-impossible balancing act. With millions of clients and billions in capital at stake, every move carries immense reputational and financial risk.


6. Vienna’s Risky Proposal: Unfreezing Assets

Austria proposed a bold solution: partially unfreeze Rasperia assets to satisfy Raiffeisen’s claims. While theoretically resolving the immediate financial conflict, the proposal has been met with skepticism at the EU level. Authorities fear this could create a dangerous precedent, triggering a flood of similar claims by other companies under sanctions.


7. EU Alarm: The Pandora’s Box of Precedents

Brussels remains wary. Allowing Austria to bypass standard sanction procedures risks undermining the EU’s sanctions framework entirely. Officials fear that approving the unfreezing could open a loophole, letting sanctioned entities reclaim assets indirectly, thereby weakening the bloc’s collective stance against Russia.


8. Raiffeisen’s Denials and Legal Maneuvers

Despite public denials — “Raiffeisen has no dealings with Rasperia,” a spokesperson insists — the bank is pursuing access to frozen assets in Strabag. If EU negotiations fail, the bank is prepared to litigate in Austria, escalating the transnational corporate conflict further.


9. The Impossible Sale: Five Regulators Standing in the Way

Selling Raiffeisen’s Russian operations is no simple matter. CEO Johann Strobl admits that the sale requires approval from five separate regulators, including the ECB and Russian authorities. This bureaucratic quagmire illustrates why Raiffeisen remains exposed to sanctions, legal claims, and reputational risks simultaneously.


10. Sanctions in Peril: Europe Watches the Fallout

The fallout extends beyond Raiffeisen and Austria. A single misstep could fracture the EU sanctions system, emboldening sanctioned companies and exposing regulatory vulnerabilities. Europe watches closely, aware that a precedent set here could resonate across financial and political landscapes for years.

Maria Sharapova

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