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Unilever has sold its Russian subsidiary to a local manufacturing group for a reported €520 million after repeated criticism for not ditching operations in the country after its invasion of Ukraine.
The London-listed consumer group, which has been branded a “sponsor of war” for not exiting Russia sooner, said it had reached an agreement to sell Unilever Rus to Arnest, a Russian manufacturer of cosmetics, perfumes and household products.
The sale includes all of Unilever’s business in Russia and its four factories in the country, as well as the group’s interests in Belarus. The Russian arm, which employs about 3,000 people, owns the local rights to brands ranging from Dove soap to Domestos disinfectant.
Arnest is owned by Alexey Sagal, a Russian businessman and a major beneficiary of western companies’ exodus from Russia. Last year he snapped up Heineken’s Russian business, including seven breweries and 1,800 employees, for just €1.
Hein Schumacher, the boss of Unilever, said on Thursday that the company had “been carefully preparing the Unilever Russia business for a potential sale” over the past year. “This work has been very complex, and has involved separating IT platforms and supply chains, as well as migrating brands to Cyrillic.”
He added: “The completion of the sale ends Unilever Russia’s presence in the country.”
The move comes almost three years after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. Since then the maker of Marmite spread, Magnum ice cream and Hellmann’s mayonnaise has faced repeated calls from campaigners and politicians to exit the country.
Sir Chris Bryant, the senior Labour MP, said the “idea of Unilever making money out of selling Magnums to Russians, as essential items apparently — it angers me beyond belief”.
Ukraine’s government called Unilever a “sponsor” of the war after the company paid 3.2 billion roubles (about £27 million) in corporate taxes in Russia in 2022.Oleh Simoroz, a Ukrainian soldier injured in the war, had also urged the consumer goods group to stop doing business in Russia, complaining that “you’re paying taxes to the aggressor country and thus financing terrorism”.
Schumacher had argued that trading in the region remained the “best option” to avoid the risk of its business ending up in the hands of the Russian state, “either directly or indirectly, and to help protect our people”. The Unilever boss has also said previously that pulling out “could result in it being nationalised”, pointing to the takeover of the Russian subsidiary of Danone, the French yoghurt maker.
In September, The Moral Rating Agency, which highlights corporations’ ties with Russia, said Unilever should not be applauded over reports that it was due to sell its Russian assets to the Arnest group.
The agency said: “It is interesting that a payment of half a billion dollars might help it do the moral thing. While an exit would be good news, we should never forget that Unilever has been supporting the Russian economy at the rate of half a billion pounds a year, which is enough to pay for a thermobaric rocket every nine days or an Iranian drone every 17 minutes.”
Schumacher said in July that the conglomerate had “substantially” localised its operations in Russia over the past year and that its main objective was to minimise economic contributions to the Russian state.
In March 2022 Unilever became the first big European food company to stop imports into and exports out of Russia.
A full exit from Russia is one of the most important decisions taken by Schumacher so far, who in his first year in charge has overseen plans to spin off its ice cream business, lay off as many as 7,500 staff, and focus on 30 key brands to reverse years of under-performance.
Several British companies still operate in Russia, despite a large number of well-known names, such as Bet365, Next and Johnson Matthey all leaving the country (Tom Saunders writes).
FS Mackenzie International Group, the logistics company, states on its website that it is “proud to have been one of the first international business teams to set foot in the Russian market”. It has seven offices in the country and says that it is “committed to both developing and investing further into the Russian market”.
Other companies include BT Group, which must operate in the country and continue its relationship with Russia’s state-backed telecoms operator, Rostelecom, in order to allow people in the UK to make calls to Russia.
The chief financial officer of Smith & Nephew said several months after the invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 that the medical equipment maker does not source directly from Russia and has stopped new investments there but still provides essential medical products.
According to a paper by the Kyiv School of Economics, the number of foreign companies with assets in Russia has not significantly declined, with 1,519 businesses holding assets in 2021 compared with 1,304 at the end of 2023.
However, sales have fallen by 39.2 per cent from $319 billion to around $194 billion. The greatest revenue reduction was seen among companies from the United States and Germany, while companies from China had the largest growth.
Profits remained largely unchanged with the companies collectively making $18.4 billion in 2021 versus $16.7 billion in 2023.
Chinese companies are among the main beneficiaries of the exit of western corporations. For example, they quickly moved in to fill the space left by a dozen western car brands that halted operations in Russia.
Haval, the Chinese automotive company, increased its revenue from $818 million in 2021 to $3.79 billion in 2023. Chery Automobile’s revenue rose from $0.86 billion to $6.53 billion.
BT said: “We strongly condemn the invasion of Ukraine, and we adhere rigorously to all international sanctions. We continue to maintain connectivity into and out of Russia — in line with our view that an unconnected world is even more dangerous.”
A spokesman for FS Mackenzie said: “We still have offices in Russia. However, for the last two years, we have significantly scaled down our operation and activity there and are in the process of restructuring our organisation in Russia, which takes time.
“Business activity from the UK to Russia is almost zero, apart from transporting some medical or humanitarian goods. Our company strictly adheres to the rules of the western sanctions. We also have offices in the Ukraine as well.”
Smith & Nephew declined to comment.