by winston » Mon Sep 29, 2008 9:36 am
Siberian story
Benjamin Scent
Russian billionaire Oleg Deripaska, who turned 40 this year, first made his fortune buying up aluminum assets in Russia. He has since expanded his empire into many industries in the Russian economy, saying the best investment opportunities are in his backyard.
His future, however, may depend on China. It is the mainland's voracious appetite for raw materials that has fueled a boom in aluminum prices that is expected to continue unabated.
In 1997, when Deripaska got his start in business, the price of aluminum was US$1,507.50 (HK$11758.50) per tonne.
Since then, the metal's value has skyrocketed 66 percent to about US$2,495 a tonne. Global demand for aluminum is expected to double in the next decade.
The aluminum company he controls, UC RUSAL, recently said that China will account for more than one-third of its total aluminum sales by 2015.
UC RUSAL has also entered a strategic partnership with China Power Investment Corp to built an alumina refinery in Guinea and a smelter in northwestern China.
Forbes magazine in their May issue listed Oleg Deripaska as the richest person in Russia for the first time, with an estimated net worth of US$28.6 billion in March. He jumped up from second place to beat out Roman Abramovich, owner of the Chelsea football club, for the first time as his wealth grew at US$378 a second since Forbes put together their 2007 list. He is now listed as the ninth richest person in the world.
Deripaska raised his initial capital as a metals trader. Then, starting with an aluminum smelter in Khakassia, southern Siberia that he acquired in 1997, he built a sprawling business empire with interests in minerals, timber, power generation, construction, auto manufacturing, banking, insurance, and airlines.
It was a brutal time when Deripaska first started, as ambitious businessmen, local officials and underworld figures competed in a mad dash to gain control of Russia's resources after the fall of Communism, in what became known as the "aluminum wars."
Basic Element, the holding company for Deripaska's investments, now controls more than 100 companies operating on five continents and employing more than 300,000 people.
His businesses have grown dramatically in just the past few years, with their combined asset value more than tripling in just two years to reach US$45 billion at the end of 2007, up from US$14 billion at the end of 2005.
Basic Element, which has been around for just 10 years, says its revenues have consistently grown at a rate of more than 40 percent a year.
The man who now controls the world's largest and most efficient aluminum producer was born in 1968 in the city of Dzerzhinsk, 249 miles east of Moscow. He grew up helping his grandparents tend a humble farm located on the edge of the Caucasus mountains in southern Russia.
In 1993, he graduated summa cum laude from the prestigious Moscow State University with a degree in physics. In 1996, he received another Bachelors Degree from the Plekhanov Academy of Economics in Moscow.
Deripaska is married to Polina Yumasheva, whose father is now married to a daughter of former Russian President Boris Yeltsin. He has two children.
Among Russia's billionaires, Deripaska, along with his friend Abramovich, is believed to be among those who are closest to Russian prime minister Vladmir Putin.
Earlier this year, a one-on-one meeting between Deripaska and the Russian leader, held at Deripaska's residence in the Black Sea resort town of Sochi, was broadcast on national television, and Deripaska plans to spend US$20 billion on developments in Putin's home town of St. Petersburg.
The self-made billionaire has also cultivated ties to people of influence in the West.
Atticus Capital co-chairman Nathaniel Rothschild, scion of the storied European banking family and in line to become the fifth Baron Rothschild, has served as a financial advisor to Deripaska, helping open doors in London financial circles and playing a crucial role in some of Deripaska's largest M&A deals.
Basic Element has in the last couple years been aggressively expanding its reach overseas.
In 2007, it acquired a 20 percent stake in Magna, a Canadian company that is one of the world's largest car component manufacturers.
That same year, it acquired a 25 percent stake in Austrian construction firm Strabag and a 9.99 percent stake in German builder Hochtief.
Already at the top of the Russian business world, Deripaska has been extending his influence into the cultural realm as well.
He sits on the Board of Trustees of the world-famous Bolshoi Theatre, which Basic Element recently brought to Hong Kong to perform its signature ballet, Spartacus, for the first time in the SAR.
So what's next for the young tycoon? He is getting ready for the Olympics.
Deripaska has shown strong support for one of Putin's pet projects - turning Sochi, known as the "Russian Riviera," into the site of the 2014 Winter Olympics.
He will be investing more than US$2 billion on upgrading the Sochi airport and building facilities to be used during the Olympics.
"In my view, Russia is the best place to invest in the world right now," Deripaska was quoted as saying earlier this year. "Russia has great potential and tremendous opportunities.
It's all about "how much you made when you were right" & "how little you lost when you were wrong"