logo
Russian diamond maker Alrosa flags high rates, inflation pressure as revenue falls

Russian diamond maker Alrosa flags high rates, inflation pressure as revenue falls

Fashion Network2 days ago
Russia's sanctions-hit diamond producer Alrosa reported a 25% fall in first-half revenue on Tuesday, warning that geopolitics and macroeconomic uncertainties were weighing on demand as high interest rates, inflation and taxes exert pressure on profits.
Group of Seven countries banned direct imports of Russian diamonds in January 2024. This was followed by a European Union and G7 ban on imports of Russia-origin diamonds via third countries. Alrosa itself has been under US sanctions since 2022.
Alrosa's full-year profits fell sharply in 2024, but the first half of 2025 showed signs of recovery, with net profit up 10.8% year-on-year to 40.6 billion roubles ($506.7 million).
Revenue fell 25% to 134.3 billion roubles and core earnings (EBITDA) dropped 42% to 37.1 billion roubles, Alrosa said.
Net debt jumped almost 10 times to 61 billion roubles, Alrosa's results filing showed, but the company's cash, cash equivalents and bank deposits rose 8.4% to 115.4 billion roubles.
"The relatively high level of the key rate and inflation continued to have an additional negative impact on the (group) in the first half of 2025," Alrosa said, pointing to rising costs for materials and fuel.
Russia's central bank has maintained elevated borrowing costs for several months, but has started an easing cycle, most recently trimming rates to 18% from 20% in late July.
Alrosa's first-half profits were boosted by the sale of its stake in Angolan state-controlled diamond miner Catoca, for which Alrosa said it received 15.9 billion roubles. A subsidiary of Oman's sovereign wealth fund replaced Alrosa, the world's largest producer of rough diamonds by volume, as a shareholder in Catoca under a deal formalised in May.
Angola had been under pressure to cease its long-standing partnership with Alrosa since the West imposed sanctions over Moscow's February 2022 full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
Prior to the deal, Alrosa held a 41% stake in Catoca, with the remaining shares owned by Endiama EP, Angola's national diamond company.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Report: Trump to offer Putin economic incentives to end war in Ukraine
Report: Trump to offer Putin economic incentives to end war in Ukraine

Euronews

time5 hours ago

  • Euronews

Report: Trump to offer Putin economic incentives to end war in Ukraine

US President Donald Trump is reportedly ready to present Vladimir Putin with a proposal that includes several economic concessions to Russia in exchange for peace in Ukraine, report claims. Among the incentives would be access to Alaska's natural resources, as well as Ukrainian rare earth minerals and the lifting of some sanctions on Russia's aircraft industry, according to UK newspaper The Telegraph. US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and other senior administration officials are reportedly working closely with Trump to finalise the proposals ahead of the summit. In April, Kyiv and Washington signed a deal that gives the US access to Ukraine's minerals. According to the Kyiv School of Economics, Ukraine holds one-third of Europe's lithium reserves and 3% of global stock. Two of Ukraine's largest lithium deposits lie in Russian-held territory, and Putin has laid claim to the valuable minerals extracted there. Ukrainians remain sceptical Ukrainians in Kyiv on Wednesday voiced scepticism that the planned summit between Trump and Putin will bring Russia's war on Ukraine to an end. Trump has threatened 'very severe consequences' if Putin does not agree to stop his war in Ukraine the summit, to be held in Alaska on Friday, though he did not say what those consequences might be. Kyiv residents weren't optimistic of a breakthrough. "In my opinion, nothing is likely to change in the coming days," said a woman who gave her name only as Natalya. "We have already seen numerous times how negotiations have been postponed, failed, and other changes have occurred." Oleksandra Kozlova, 39, head of department in a digital agency, echoed her sentiment. "People have already lost hope. Personally, I don't think this round will be decisive," she said. Trump consulted with European leaders earlier on Wednesday, who said the president assured them he would make a priority of trying to achieve a ceasefire in Ukraine when he speaks with Putin on Friday in Anchorage. Prior to Trump announcing the meeting with Putin, his efforts to pressure Russia into stopping the fighting had delivered no progress. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has repeatedly insisted any peace deals must include robust security guarantees for Ukraine to protect it from future Russian aggression.

Ibex-35 hits 15,000 points and reaches the highest level since 2007
Ibex-35 hits 15,000 points and reaches the highest level since 2007

Euronews

time7 hours ago

  • Euronews

Ibex-35 hits 15,000 points and reaches the highest level since 2007

The main index of the Spanish stock market closed on Wednesday at 15,019 points and reached levels not seen since 2007, the year in which the real estate bubble burst, leading to a global stock market collapse and a decade of austerity for the Iberian economy. At the time of writing on Thursday morning, it had continued to rise to 15,113 points. The Ibex-35 is less than 1,000 points away from beating its all-time high of 9 November 2007, a month before the outbreak of the great financial crisis. At that time it reached 16,040.40 points. Several factors could be boosting investor confidence during the eight consecutive days in which the Ibex has risen. Firstly, the US Consumer Price Index data: the drop in oil prices has kept inflation at 2.7% in both the US and Spain, so trade uncertainties and Donald Trump's tariff war do not appear to be translating, for now, into widespread price increases for consumers. Secondly, the US Federal Reserve is expected to lower its interest rates despite resistance from its chief, Jerome Powell, who believes that inflation is not sufficiently under control and that rates should therefore not be cut, despite the direct threats he has received from the US president to do so. The futures market gives a near 100% probability of a rate cut in the US, to be announced on 17 September. The biggest risers on the Ibex on Wednesday were two pharmaceutical companies: Grifols (2.18%) and Rovi (3.42%), as well as Fluidra (2.79%) and several banks such as BBVA (1.68%) and Santander (1.51%). In Europe, the German Dax was up 0.7% while London's FTSE 100 and the French Cac were up 0.2% and 0.4%, respectively. So far this year, the Spanish selective index has gained 28%. Investors await Friday's meeting between Trump and Putin in Alaska. The geopolitical news of the week is keeping the world's stock markets on edge, and they could react with a negative rebound if a satisfactory agreement is not reached between the two leaders. The meeting between the US and Russian presidents will be their first face-to-face meeting since the Russian invasion began in February 2022. The Ukrainian president and the other Western leaders, excluded from this meeting, have tried to soften their positions this afternoon so that Ukrainian territorial sovereignty does not come into play during the negotiations, in which Kyiv will have no say.

Alaska: a source of Russian imperial nostalgia
Alaska: a source of Russian imperial nostalgia

France 24

time7 hours ago

  • France 24

Alaska: a source of Russian imperial nostalgia

The territory that Russia sold to the United States in 1867 is now a symbol of the entwined history of the countries, whose relations have been severely damaged since Russia launched its offensive in Ukraine in 2022. To some experts, the summit in Alaska evoked memories of the thaw between the Soviet Union and the United States during the Cold War. "It's a classically orchestrated summit, like in the era of detente," Russian political scientist Fyodor Lukyanov said on Telegram. "Its symbolic significance is the absence of intermediaries: the powers, so to speak, decide for themselves," he added, saying that China is "not close" to Alaska and that Europe is "as far away as possible". Fur trading hub But beyond being a unique meeting place, Alaska also fuels Russian memories of the Tsarist empire, the historic predecessor of the Soviet Union. "For Russia, Alaska symbolises the peak of an expansion," Alexander Baunov, senior fellow at the Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center, said on the centre's website. It was "when the Russian continental empire had, for the only time, succeeded in crossing an ocean like the European empires", Baunov said. A Russian colony since the 18th century, Alaska was eventually sold to the United States for $7.2 million in 1867 by Tsar Alexander II. The remote territory was economically very difficult for the Russians to exploit and at the time its sale was welcomed by the Imperial Court as the country was struggling economically. But the transaction later came to be seen as a regrettable bargain after what formerly was a fur trading hub turned out to house crucial natural resources: gold and oil. 'Our bears' In recent years, the price at which Alaska was sold, considered by some to be ridiculously low, and the legal validity of the transaction have become regularly recurring debates in Russia. In July 2022, in the midst of patriotic fervour in Russia and as tensions soared between Moscow and Washington following the offensive against Ukraine, the Alaska issue resurfaced. The speaker of the Duma, the lower house of the Russian Parliament, Vyacheslav Volodin, spoke of "lands to be returned", describing Alaska as a "disputed territory". Russia's authorities are apparently not interested in reclaiming it. In 2014, Vladimir Putin, asked by a pensioner about the possibility, replied: "My dear, why do you need Alaska?" adding the territory was "too cold". Still, the idea of reclaiming Alaska is an endless source of memes widely circulating on Russian social media. One of the most famous claims that "our soul" suffered from the loss of Alaska because "it's where our bears live". The recapture of Alaska is even mentioned in a 1990s hit by a rock band Putin likes, Lyube, with the lyrics: "Stop messing around, America... And give back our Alaskan lands." © 2025 AFP

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store