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Mikhail Prokhorov

Mikhail Dmitrievich Prokhorov (Russian: Михаил Дмитриевич Прохоров, IPA: [mʲɪxɐˈil ˈdmʲitrʲɪjɪvʲɪtɕ ˈproxərəf]; born 3 May 1965) is a Russian oligarch, politician, and former owner of the Brooklyn Nets. In April 2022, Prokhorov reportedly obtained Israeli citizenship.[1]

Mikhail Prokhorov
Михаил Прохоров
Prokhorov in 2013
Born
Mikhail Dmitrievich Prokhorov

(1965-05-03) 3 May 1965 (age 58)
CitizenshipRussia, Israel
Alma materMoscow Finance Institute
Occupation(s)Businessman, politician
Known forOwner of the ONEXIM Group and the Brooklyn Nets (2010–2019)
Height6 ft 8 in (2.03 m)
Political partyCPSU (1988–91)
Right Cause (2011)
Civic Platform (2012–15)
Awards
Signature

After the collapse of the Soviet Union, Prokhorov obtained Russian state-owned metals assets at prices far below market value in Russia's controversial loans-for-shares privatization program. His company, Norilsk Nickel, became the world's largest producer of nickel and palladium. He is the former chairman of Polyus Gold, Russia's largest gold producer, and the former President of Onexim Group. As of December 1, 2021, Bloomberg Billionaires Index estimates his wealth at US$14.0 billion and has named him the 148th richest person in the world,[2] while Forbes Magazine lists his wealth at US$11.5 billion and the 193rd richest person in the world.[3]

In 2011, Prokhorov ran as an independent candidate in the 2012 Russian presidential election. He was third in voting, amassing 7.94 percent of the total vote.[citation needed] In June 2012, he declared the establishment of the new Russian political party called Civic Platform.

Early life edit

Prokhorov was born in Moscow to Tamara and Dmitri Prokhorov. On his paternal side his grandparents were Russians, relatively wealthy peasant farmers (known as kulaks) who were persecuted as class enemies under the Bolsheviks and again under Stalin.[4] His father, one of eight children, grew up poor, after his family "lost everything and was forced to flee from one part of Siberia and restart life in another".[4] He has one sibling, an elder sister, Irina. On his maternal side his grandfather was Russian, and his grandmother Anna Belkina, was a Jewish[5][4] microbiologist who remained in Moscow during World War II to make vaccines while her daughter Tamara was moved east to safety.[4]

Dmitri Prokhorov was trained as a lawyer and handled international relations for the Soviet Committee of Physical Culture and Sport. Tamara Prokhorova was a materials engineer at the Institute for Chemical Machine-Building.[6] As part of his job, Dmitri Prokhorov had the opportunity to travel abroad. His wife worked as an engineer for a research group at the institute specializing in plastics. They died within a year of each other, both from heart disease when they were in their late 50s.[4] Mikhail Prokhorov's sister, Irina, who "runs his philanthropic organizations, an erudite literary magazine, and a publishing house ... lives in a wing of his mansion west of Moscow".[6]

In 1989, he graduated from the Moscow Finance Institute. From 1989 to 1992, he worked in a management position at the International Bank for Economic Cooperation. Thereafter, he shortly served as head of management board of the MFK bank (International Finance Company) (Russian: «Международная финансовая компания» (МФК)) [citation needed] and then in 1993 the newly formed United Export-Import Bank (Russian: "ОНЭКСИМ-банк") (Uneximbank; akas: Onexim Bank; Oneksimbank), with Alexander Khloponin, a friend from college, and Vladimir Potanin, to whom he was introduced by Khloponin and who became his business partner.[6] Oneksimbank is the financial twin of MFK and was also known as the ONEKSIMbank-MFK banking group which was also close to Andrey Vavilov.[7][8]

Business career edit

In 1992, at the age of 27, Prokhorov partnered with Potanin to run Interros, a holding company that they used in 1995 to effect the purchase of Norilsk Nickel, one of Russia's largest nickel and palladium mining and smelting companies.[9] During the largely un-regulated privatization of former state-controlled industries after the collapse of the USSR, Prokhorov and Potanin (the latter by then a deputy prime minister who oversaw privatization) were able acquire the shares from the workers of Norilsk Nickel for a fraction of their estimated market value and seize ownership of the company. When he departed in 2007, Prokhorov's share of the company was worth US$7.5 billion.[10]

Prokhorov's first major financial success came at MFK, which became a depository institution for the government. The bank acquired Soviet assets in the amount of US$300 to US$400 million. Prokhorov held the post of chairman of the board from 1992 until 1993. In 1993, Prokhorov became the chairman of the board for Potanin's Onexim Bank, which, in 1993, became the paying agent for Finance Ministry bonds and a servicing bank for the City of Moscow's external economic activities. In May 1994, Onexim Bank focused on large clients in foreign economic activity especially in the sectors of oil and gas, chemical and metallurgical industries. In 1994, Onexim became the depository and paying agent for Russian Treasury obligations, and in 1995, it became the authorized bank for the federal agency dealing with bankrupt enterprises.[11]

Banks holding government funds earned handsome fees and paid minimal interest at a time when inflation was in the triple digits.[12]

In the 1990s, the Russian government needed loans to operate. Prokhorov partnered with Potanin. Their Onexim bank ran auctions for the government, in which bidders won the right to loan the Russian government money. Onexim and its affiliates were the winning bidders at the Norilsk Nickel and other auctions they conducted. The Russian government secured the loans with blocks of shares of the newly privatized state enterprises. The government never repaid the loans, and, as a result, Onexim received ownership of the collateral, which was the shares in the privatized enterprises.[12]

When cash privatization eventually replaced the failing voucher privatization phase, the government came up with a scheme to leverage the privatization process and quickly raise money for its cash-strapped operations. Under the "loans for shares" program, the administration sold off majority stakes in some of its prized companies in the energy, telecommunications, and metallurgical sectors in exchange for loans taken from the new private sector banks owned by rich businessmen. According to the terms of the loan, the lender could stake equity ownership in the company if the government failed to repay the loans by September 1996. Auctions conducted under the "loans for shares" program were executed in such a way that only the few businessmen who owned these banks were allowed to partake in auctions. Following these bogus auctions, the majority stakes in some of the biggest Russian companies were acquired by a small number of major banks at abysmally low prices. These businessmen also bankrolled Yeltsin's 1996 presidential election victory, exerting their influence over the then president.[13]

Onexim purchased Sidanko, which was a part of the Novolipetsk metallurgical industrial complex, and also the Novorossiisk marine shipping company and a large share of the Northwest marine shipping company. All of these enterprises were purchased by Prokhorov and Potanin for approximately one third of their estimated market value. [clarification needed] [citation needed]

In April 1996, Prokhorov was appointed to the Board of Directors of Norilsk Nickel (which then still belonged to the state). In November 1995, Onexim Bank won 38% of Norilsk Nickel in a loans-for-shares auction for US$170.1 million, US$100,000 (or less than 1%) higher than the bid starting price. At the time, Norilsk produced 25% of the world's nickel output.[14]

Onexim managed the Norilsk Nickel auction, with a reservation price of US$170 million. It arranged three bids from affiliates, all at US$170 or US$170.1 million. Rossiiski Kredit Bank offered US$355 million, more than twice the starting amount. However, Onexim disqualified Rossiiski Kredit's bid on the basis that the bid amount exceeded Rossiiski Kredit's charter capital (the nominal value of its outstanding shares). The auction rules required Onexim to provide any objections in advance of the auction, to give bidders time to cure them. None of the submitted bids even closely approximated the market value of Norilsk Nickel, which had annual profits of around US$400 million.[15]

60 Minutes, the American news program, interviewed Prokhorov. The program alleged that:

"Kremlin leaders gave him what amounts to an insiders opportunity to buy one of the state's most valuable assets. It was acquired from the Kremlin in a so-called auction for the measly sum of a few hundred million dollars in a process that even Prokhorov's business partner admits wasn't perfect, and probably not even legal under Western standards. But it was legal in Russia".

During the interview, Russian business correspondent Yulia Latynina stated about the auction of Norilsk Nickel, "Yes, it was rigged. But, it cannot be explained in normal economic terms to an outsider, especially an American. You had robber barons, we have oligarchs."[16][17]

In December 2011, Prokhorov capped a year of higher-profile political activity in Russia with the December declaration that he would run as an independent in the 2012 presidential elections. He took third place in these elections with 7.94% of the vote.[citation needed] In June 2012, he declared the establishment of a new political party called the “Party of Civic Platform”. He resigned his positions as Chairman of Polyus Gold and President of the ONEXIM Group to enter politics in June 2011.

In August 2017, Prokhorov agreed to sell 7% of Rusal to fellow billionaire Viktor Vekselberg for $503.9 million. Talks between the two had stalled earlier in the year with Prokhorov selling 3.3% via an accelerated bookbinding.[18]

In October 2017, Prokhorov and Viktor Vekselberg sold 3% of Rusal for $315 million in an accelerated bookbuilding. The sale of Prokhorov's 0,7% reduced his stake in the company to 6%.[19]

Norilsk Nickel edit

 
Mikhail Prokhorov (right-center, wearing red tie)
 
Mikhail Prokhorov (center)

After selling off most of Norilsk's non-mining assets, Prokhorov moved to modernize a highly complex mining operation which required icebreakers to transport metal over the frozen Arctic region. Prokhorov invested in an innovative Finnish freighter that did not require icebreakers. Norilsk Nickel is headquartered in Moscow. Environmental and labor conditions are harsh, and pollution remains a problem; Prokhorov has invested heavily in pollution control. However, despite these efforts, the mining areas continue to suffer from a high level of pollution.[20] He converted Norilsk's gold-mining interests into the US$8.5 billion corporation Polyus Gold, Russia's largest gold producer. In 2003, he oversaw the acquisition of Stillwater Mining, his first international venture. He resigned as Norilsk CEO in February 2007 and declared his intention to separate his assets from those of long-time partner Vladimir Potanin. The two engaged in protracted negotiations to separate the conglomerate Interros, which the duo co-owned since the 1990s, into separate holdings.[21]

ONEXIM Group edit

In May 2007, following the decision to exit Interros, Prokhorov launched the private investment fund ONEXIM Group, with assets valued at US$17 billion at the time. As the separation from Interros proceeded, and as other industries caught Prokhorov's attention, the group rapidly changed its investment profile. In April 2008, Prokhorov sold his 25% plus two shares stake in Norilsk Nickel to United Company RUSAL, another mining conglomerate controlled by his fellow billionaire Oleg Deripaska, in exchange for some 14% of Rusal stock, about US$5 billion in cash, and additional payment obligations of US$2 billion. The deal has been singled out as a major success for Prokhorov as only three months later, following a dip in oil prices, a disastrous stock market crash halved the value of most Russian companies, including Norilsk. He emerged as one of the very few businessmen to have cashed out in time. However, his wealth has also been affected, as the value of his remaining interests in various companies (including Rusal and Open Investments) declined sharply, and as the remaining payment from Rusal had to be postponed but has since been fully paid. [citation needed]

In September 2008, ONEXIM Group acquired 50% of Renaissance Capital,[22] a major Russian investment bank which has reportedly encountered liquidity problems. ONEXIM purchased a small bank, renaming it IFC[23] (for the bank which Prokhorov had run in the early 1990s). One of ONEXIM Group's divisions focuses on the development of nanotechnology investing in high-technology projects such as white LEDs. One of the key areas of development is the production of materials with ultra–tiny structures used in energy generation and medicine. As part of that focus, ONEXIM purchased Optogan in 2008. [citation needed]

In June 2007, the Russian Prime Minister, Mikhail Fradkov, announced the formation of the Government Council for Nanotechnology, to oversee the development of nanotechnology in the country. Prokhorov was one of 15 individuals appointed to the council, which was to be chaired by then-First Deputy Prime Minister Sergei Ivanov.[24]

In July 2009, the shareholders of RBC Information Systems agreed with Prokhorov's ONEXIM Group to sell an additional 51% stake for US$80 million, half of which went to pay off debts. The deal was closed in 2010. Prokhorov has business interests in mining and metallurgy (Polyus Gold, Intergeo, stake in Rusal), financial services (IFC-Bank, Soglassye insurance company, half of Renaissance Capital), utilities (stake in Quadra), nanotech, media (JV!) and real estate development (Open Investments). [citation needed]

In 2016, Onexim sold its 20% stake in Uralkrali, and is considering selling off assets including United Co. Rusal, Opin PJSC and Quadra.[25]

In January 2022, ONEXIM Group sold 82.47% of the energy company PJSC Quadra [ru] to a subsidiary of Rosatom State Corporation.[26]

International investments and patronage edit

Prokhorov owns a number of international investments. In Israel, he owns two private hospitals, where he has paid for the medical treatment of friends such as Alla Pugacheva.[27]

In March 2004, Prokhorov founded the Cultural Initiatives Foundation (as part of the Mikhail Prokhorov Foundation). It is headed by Prokhorov's elder sister, Irina, a prominent Russian publisher. At one time, he financially supported CSKA Moscow's basketball, hockey and football clubs, and is a member of the Supreme Council of the Sport Russia organization. He serves as president of the Russian Biathlon Union.[28] He is also an avid freeride/freestyle jet skier. He performs tricks on a jet ski in a professional stand-up achievement. In the 60 Minutes interview he stated that a backflip is his most impressive trick.[16]

In September 2009, he made an offer to buy a controlling interest in the New Jersey Nets of the National Basketball Association and half of a project to build a new arena in Brooklyn.[29][30] On 11 May 2010, the NBA approved the sale of the Nets to Prokhorov, making him the majority owner of the team with an 80% stake. He also acquired a 45% interest in the new Barclays Center sports and entertainment arena.[31][32]

He became the first non-North American team owner in the NBA.[29] In December 2011, after announcing his run for the Russian presidency, the NBA confirmed that Prokhorov's ownership interest would not need to be altered in the event of his election (Herb Kohl, a then sitting but since retired U.S. Senator, owned the Milwaukee Bucks at the time).[33] On 30 April 2012, the Nets officially made the move to Brooklyn, rebranding themselves as the Brooklyn Nets.[34]

In October 2017, reports continued to circulate that Prokhorov was moving closer to closing the sale of 49 percent of the Brooklyn Nets.[35][36] On 27 October, ESPN reported that Prokhorov had agreed to sell the 49 percent to Taiwanese-Canadian businessman Joseph Tsai, co-founder and executive vice chairman of Alibaba. The stake was valued at $1.2 billion.[37] On 18 September 2019, Prokhorov sold the remaining 51 percent of the Nets to Tsai.[38] According to Dmitry Razumov, CEO of Onexim, Prokhorov's investment was less than $1.5 billion, and the overall sale was estimated at $3.5 billion, with an income of about $2 billion.[39]

Prokhorov controls, and is one of the largest investors in, Sensorium Corp, a virtual reality company.[40]

Controversies edit

At a Christmas party for the Russian nouveau riche at the French Alpine resort of Courchevel in January 2007, he was arrested on suspicion of arranging prostitutes for his guests.[29][41] After three days, he was released without charge.[42] In September 2009, Prokhorov was officially cleared from this charge and the court case was dismissed.[43] According to the French prosecutor, he had paid all expenses for the single women to travel to France, but they were not professional prostitutes or working for a prostitution agency.[44]

Prokhorov made headlines in early March 2010 when he was forced to forfeit a £36 million deposit he had placed on the £360 million Villa Leopolda in the French Riviera in 2008. Under French property law, once an initial sale contract has been signed, a deposit can be refunded only during a seven-day cooling-off period. On 2 March 2010, a court at Nice in France ruled that the villa's owner, 71-year-old Lily Safra, could keep the £36 million deposit, plus £1 million in interest.[citation needed]

Regarding Prokhorov's political efforts and the Right Cause party, critical commentators claim that the entire endeavor is just a project of the Kremlin closely curated by Vladislav Surkov and that Prokorov was effectively appointed to be the party leader rather than being chosen by independently minded party members.[45][46] According to them, the "puppet party" was designed to divert opposition voters by using liberal rhetoric.

Prokhorov had run the Russian Biathlon Union from 2008 to 2014 and offered legal services to disqualified Russian biathletes.[47]

Prokhorov is one of many "Russian oligarchs" named in the Countering America's Adversaries Through Sanctions Act, CAATSA, signed into law by President Donald Trump in 2017.[48]

Russian politics edit

In May 2011, Prokhorov announced a plan to join the leadership of the Russian pro-business political party Right Cause.[29] While not antagonistic to the Kremlin, the party was seen as likely to support President Dmitry Medvedev rather than Prime Minister Vladimir Putin if the latter entered the 2012 presidential race. In June of that year, Prokhorov was elected to the leadership of the party at the Right Cause Party Congress of 2011. At the acceptance ceremony, Prokhorov officially criticized the present ruling tandem of Medvedev-Putin, the structure of Russia, and vowed to bring Russia back to a stable development course.[49] However, in September 2011, Prokhorov reversed course and resigned from Right Cause, "condemning it as a 'puppet Kremlin party' micromanaged by a 'puppet master' in the president's office ... Vladislav Y. Surkov".[50]

In 2014, Prokhorov announced that he was considering moving control of his ownership in the Brooklyn Nets to one of his Russian-based subsidiaries, in an attempt to comply with Putin's order, signed into law in 2013,[51] that no Russian politicians should have foreign assets and equity, and that all Russian companies should be registered and pay tax locally.[52]

In 2016, Prokhorov ran afoul of Putin when his media group Onexim, specifically RBC Media, published articles and news reports on the Panama Papers and Putin's son-in-law Kirill Shamalov's connections and offshore assets.[53] Onexim offices were raided by the Federal Security Service as well as tax department officials, in April 2016.[54] The raids were officially described as part of an investigation into another bank but the FSB reported that tax violations were discovered at "a number of commercial structures".[55]

A number of media journalists, including editor-in-chief of RBC Media, were fired after the raid, amid rumors of pressure and opposition from the Kremlin.[citation needed]

In June 2012, he became the leader of the Civic Platform Party.[56] In 2015, Prokhorov resigned as leader of the party and left it.[57]

2012 presidential campaign edit

 
Prokhorov presidential campaign logo

In December 2011, after the legislative elections, Prokhorov announced that he would contest the 2012 presidential election against Vladimir Putin as an independent.[58] He called it [59] "probably the most important decision of my life".[58] According to Communist leader Gennady Zyuganov and opposition leader Boris Nemtsov, both saw the move as inspired by the Kremlin. According to Nemtsov, it was an attempt "to preserve Putin's regime".[60] He collected 2 million signatures needed to allow him to run for the presidency.[61] Prokhorov said he would not base his campaign on criticism of Putin. "Criticism must make up no more than 10% ... I would like to focus on the things I would do," he said.[62]

On 4 March 2012 presidential polling, Prokhorov gained 7.98% of the vote.[63][64] According to a poll by VTSIOM, his candidacy was known by only 8% of the Russian electorate.[citation needed]

On election day, Prokhorov said: "Initially I had no illusions that I was going to the presidential elections, which are, in fact, dishonest. Obviously, preferences were made in favor of one candidate".[65]

Lawsuit against Grigory Rodchenkov edit

Following Russia's banning from the 2018 Winter Olympics and the stripping of medals from multiple Russian athletes, in February 2018, Prokorov agreed to finance a defamation lawsuit in New York against Grigory Rodchenkov, the former mastermind behind Russia's state sponsored Olympic doping program. The suit claims that Rodchenkov defamed three Russian biathletes — Olga Zaytseva, Yana Romanova and Olga Vilukhina — when Rodchenkov included them on a list of athletes who took performance-enhancing drugs as part of a state-controlled program that corrupted the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia. The women, who were stripped of the silver medal they won as part of a relay team, are seeking $10 million each in damages.[66]

In April 2018, Rodchenkov, through his lawyer, Jim Walden, countersued Prokhorov under New York's anti-SLAPP law asserting that Prokhorov's suit was frivolous and intended to limit an individual's First Amendment rights to free speech. According to published reports, the countersuit is likely to seek the names of other individuals who are financing the lawsuit against Rodchenkov as well as information about the assets of Prokhorov.[67]

Walden said he believes Prokhorov's lawsuit was intentionally designed to uncover Rodchenkov's whereabouts in the United States and allow agents of the Russian government to find him.[68]

Personal life edit

Prokhorov has never been married, but has been engaged twice. Shortly after purchasing the Nets, he vowed to get married if the Nets had not won the NBA championship within five years. In July 2015, he rescinded the pledge, saying that NBA Commissioner Adam Silver had "taken his place" by marrying his fiancée in May.[69]

Awards edit

In August 2006, he was awarded the Order of Friendship for his significant contribution to the growth of Russia's economic potential, when the President of the Russian Federation, Vladimir Putin, signed an order for the granting of state honors on 18 August 2006. In March 2011, he was bestowed with the French Legion of Honour. France's ambassador to Moscow, Jean de Gliniasty, presented it at the French embassy in Moscow.[70]

See also edit

References edit

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  57. ^ "Прохоров решил ликвидировать "Гражданскую платформу" и вышел из партии". www.mk.ru. 13 March 2015.
  58. ^ a b Morcroft, Greg, "NBA team owner Prokhorov to run against Putin", MarketWatch citing Bloomberg, 12 December 2011.
  59. ^ Barry, Ellen, and David M. Herszenhorn, "Billionaire and Ex-Minister to Oppose Putin in Russian Presidential Election" (limited no-charge access), The New York Times, 12 December 2011. The Times quote also said "serious" instead of "important", v. the MarketWatch quote of the same date. Retrieved 12 December 2011.
  60. ^ "BBC News - Profile: Mikhail Prokhorov, Russian billionaire". BBC News. 6 March 2012. Retrieved 22 March 2015.
  61. ^ Soldak, Katya. "Russian Billionaire Mikhail Prokhorov: From Oligarch To President?". Forbes. Retrieved 30 November 2016.
  62. ^ "Russia billionaire Mikhail Prokhorov to challenge Putin". BBC News. 6 March 2012. Retrieved 30 November 2016.
  63. ^ . ЦИК РФ. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 6 February 2016.
  64. ^ Results of the presidential elections in Russia 2012, sobesednik.ru.
  65. ^ М.Прохоров: Выборы были легитимными, но не честными (in Russian), RBK, 4 March 2012
  66. ^ "Russian Olympians file libel suit against doping whistleblower". New York Post. 20 February 2018. Retrieved 2 May 2018.
  67. ^ "Doping Whistleblower Sues Russian Olympians and Their Oligarch Backer, an N.B.A. Owner". The New York Times. 30 April 2018. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2 May 2018.
  68. ^ "Russian Doping Whistleblower Counter-sues Athletes, Russian Tycoon". Retrieved 2 May 2018.
  69. ^ Mandell, Nina (29 July 2015). "Nets owner Mikhail Prokhorov balks on marriage bet he made five years ago". USA Today. Retrieved 14 March 2016.
  70. ^ Russian Capitalist Wiki contributors (15 January 2014). "Mikhail Prokhorov" 23 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine. Russian Capitalist Wiki. (Retrieved 13 Feb 2014).

External links edit

  Media related to Mikhail Prokhorov at Wikimedia Commons

  • Article about his 12 January 2007 arrest, MSNBC.
  • , kommersant.com.

mikhail, prokhorov, this, name, that, follows, eastern, slavic, naming, customs, patronymic, dmitrievitch, family, name, prokhorov, mikhail, dmitrievich, prokhorov, russian, Михаил, Дмитриевич, Прохоров, mʲɪxɐˈil, ˈdmʲitrʲɪjɪvʲɪtɕ, ˈproxərəf, born, 1965, russi. In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming customs the patronymic is Dmitrievitch and the family name is Prokhorov Mikhail Dmitrievich Prokhorov Russian Mihail Dmitrievich Prohorov IPA mʲɪxɐˈil ˈdmʲitrʲɪjɪvʲɪtɕ ˈproxeref born 3 May 1965 is a Russian oligarch politician and former owner of the Brooklyn Nets In April 2022 Prokhorov reportedly obtained Israeli citizenship 1 Mikhail ProkhorovMihail ProhorovProkhorov in 2013BornMikhail Dmitrievich Prokhorov 1965 05 03 3 May 1965 age 58 Moscow Russian SFSR Soviet Union now Russia CitizenshipRussia IsraelAlma materMoscow Finance InstituteOccupation s Businessman politicianKnown forOwner of the ONEXIM Group and the Brooklyn Nets 2010 2019 Height6 ft 8 in 2 03 m Political partyCPSU 1988 91 Right Cause 2011 Civic Platform 2012 15 AwardsOrder of Friendship Legion of Honour Chevalier Mikhail Prokhorov s voice source source Speaking on the Echo of Moscow radio programRecorded 2 September 2013Signature After the collapse of the Soviet Union Prokhorov obtained Russian state owned metals assets at prices far below market value in Russia s controversial loans for shares privatization program His company Norilsk Nickel became the world s largest producer of nickel and palladium He is the former chairman of Polyus Gold Russia s largest gold producer and the former President of Onexim Group As of December 1 2021 Bloomberg Billionaires Index estimates his wealth at US 14 0 billion and has named him the 148th richest person in the world 2 while Forbes Magazine lists his wealth at US 11 5 billion and the 193rd richest person in the world 3 In 2011 Prokhorov ran as an independent candidate in the 2012 Russian presidential election He was third in voting amassing 7 94 percent of the total vote citation needed In June 2012 he declared the establishment of the new Russian political party called Civic Platform Contents 1 Early life 2 Business career 2 1 Norilsk Nickel 2 2 ONEXIM Group 3 International investments and patronage 4 Controversies 5 Russian politics 5 1 2012 presidential campaign 6 Lawsuit against Grigory Rodchenkov 7 Personal life 8 Awards 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksEarly life editProkhorov was born in Moscow to Tamara and Dmitri Prokhorov On his paternal side his grandparents were Russians relatively wealthy peasant farmers known as kulaks who were persecuted as class enemies under the Bolsheviks and again under Stalin 4 His father one of eight children grew up poor after his family lost everything and was forced to flee from one part of Siberia and restart life in another 4 He has one sibling an elder sister Irina On his maternal side his grandfather was Russian and his grandmother Anna Belkina was a Jewish 5 4 microbiologist who remained in Moscow during World War II to make vaccines while her daughter Tamara was moved east to safety 4 Dmitri Prokhorov was trained as a lawyer and handled international relations for the Soviet Committee of Physical Culture and Sport Tamara Prokhorova was a materials engineer at the Institute for Chemical Machine Building 6 As part of his job Dmitri Prokhorov had the opportunity to travel abroad His wife worked as an engineer for a research group at the institute specializing in plastics They died within a year of each other both from heart disease when they were in their late 50s 4 Mikhail Prokhorov s sister Irina who runs his philanthropic organizations an erudite literary magazine and a publishing house lives in a wing of his mansion west of Moscow 6 In 1989 he graduated from the Moscow Finance Institute From 1989 to 1992 he worked in a management position at the International Bank for Economic Cooperation Thereafter he shortly served as head of management board of the MFK bank International Finance Company Russian Mezhdunarodnaya finansovaya kompaniya MFK citation needed and then in 1993 the newly formed United Export Import Bank Russian ONEKSIM bank Uneximbank akas Onexim Bank Oneksimbank with Alexander Khloponin a friend from college and Vladimir Potanin to whom he was introduced by Khloponin and who became his business partner 6 Oneksimbank is the financial twin of MFK and was also known as the ONEKSIMbank MFK banking group which was also close to Andrey Vavilov 7 8 Business career editIn 1992 at the age of 27 Prokhorov partnered with Potanin to run Interros a holding company that they used in 1995 to effect the purchase of Norilsk Nickel one of Russia s largest nickel and palladium mining and smelting companies 9 During the largely un regulated privatization of former state controlled industries after the collapse of the USSR Prokhorov and Potanin the latter by then a deputy prime minister who oversaw privatization were able acquire the shares from the workers of Norilsk Nickel for a fraction of their estimated market value and seize ownership of the company When he departed in 2007 Prokhorov s share of the company was worth US 7 5 billion 10 Prokhorov s first major financial success came at MFK which became a depository institution for the government The bank acquired Soviet assets in the amount of US 300 to US 400 million Prokhorov held the post of chairman of the board from 1992 until 1993 In 1993 Prokhorov became the chairman of the board for Potanin s Onexim Bank which in 1993 became the paying agent for Finance Ministry bonds and a servicing bank for the City of Moscow s external economic activities In May 1994 Onexim Bank focused on large clients in foreign economic activity especially in the sectors of oil and gas chemical and metallurgical industries In 1994 Onexim became the depository and paying agent for Russian Treasury obligations and in 1995 it became the authorized bank for the federal agency dealing with bankrupt enterprises 11 Banks holding government funds earned handsome fees and paid minimal interest at a time when inflation was in the triple digits 12 In the 1990s the Russian government needed loans to operate Prokhorov partnered with Potanin Their Onexim bank ran auctions for the government in which bidders won the right to loan the Russian government money Onexim and its affiliates were the winning bidders at the Norilsk Nickel and other auctions they conducted The Russian government secured the loans with blocks of shares of the newly privatized state enterprises The government never repaid the loans and as a result Onexim received ownership of the collateral which was the shares in the privatized enterprises 12 When cash privatization eventually replaced the failing voucher privatization phase the government came up with a scheme to leverage the privatization process and quickly raise money for its cash strapped operations Under the loans for shares program the administration sold off majority stakes in some of its prized companies in the energy telecommunications and metallurgical sectors in exchange for loans taken from the new private sector banks owned by rich businessmen According to the terms of the loan the lender could stake equity ownership in the company if the government failed to repay the loans by September 1996 Auctions conducted under the loans for shares program were executed in such a way that only the few businessmen who owned these banks were allowed to partake in auctions Following these bogus auctions the majority stakes in some of the biggest Russian companies were acquired by a small number of major banks at abysmally low prices These businessmen also bankrolled Yeltsin s 1996 presidential election victory exerting their influence over the then president 13 Onexim purchased Sidanko which was a part of the Novolipetsk metallurgical industrial complex and also the Novorossiisk marine shipping company and a large share of the Northwest marine shipping company All of these enterprises were purchased by Prokhorov and Potanin for approximately one third of their estimated market value clarification needed citation needed In April 1996 Prokhorov was appointed to the Board of Directors of Norilsk Nickel which then still belonged to the state In November 1995 Onexim Bank won 38 of Norilsk Nickel in a loans for shares auction for US 170 1 million US 100 000 or less than 1 higher than the bid starting price At the time Norilsk produced 25 of the world s nickel output 14 Onexim managed the Norilsk Nickel auction with a reservation price of US 170 million It arranged three bids from affiliates all at US 170 or US 170 1 million Rossiiski Kredit Bank offered US 355 million more than twice the starting amount However Onexim disqualified Rossiiski Kredit s bid on the basis that the bid amount exceeded Rossiiski Kredit s charter capital the nominal value of its outstanding shares The auction rules required Onexim to provide any objections in advance of the auction to give bidders time to cure them None of the submitted bids even closely approximated the market value of Norilsk Nickel which had annual profits of around US 400 million 15 60 Minutes the American news program interviewed Prokhorov The program alleged that Kremlin leaders gave him what amounts to an insiders opportunity to buy one of the state s most valuable assets It was acquired from the Kremlin in a so called auction for the measly sum of a few hundred million dollars in a process that even Prokhorov s business partner admits wasn t perfect and probably not even legal under Western standards But it was legal in Russia During the interview Russian business correspondent Yulia Latynina stated about the auction of Norilsk Nickel Yes it was rigged But it cannot be explained in normal economic terms to an outsider especially an American You had robber barons we have oligarchs 16 17 In December 2011 Prokhorov capped a year of higher profile political activity in Russia with the December declaration that he would run as an independent in the 2012 presidential elections He took third place in these elections with 7 94 of the vote citation needed In June 2012 he declared the establishment of a new political party called the Party of Civic Platform He resigned his positions as Chairman of Polyus Gold and President of the ONEXIM Group to enter politics in June 2011 In August 2017 Prokhorov agreed to sell 7 of Rusal to fellow billionaire Viktor Vekselberg for 503 9 million Talks between the two had stalled earlier in the year with Prokhorov selling 3 3 via an accelerated bookbinding 18 In October 2017 Prokhorov and Viktor Vekselberg sold 3 of Rusal for 315 million in an accelerated bookbuilding The sale of Prokhorov s 0 7 reduced his stake in the company to 6 19 Norilsk Nickel edit nbsp Mikhail Prokhorov right center wearing red tie nbsp Mikhail Prokhorov center After selling off most of Norilsk s non mining assets Prokhorov moved to modernize a highly complex mining operation which required icebreakers to transport metal over the frozen Arctic region Prokhorov invested in an innovative Finnish freighter that did not require icebreakers Norilsk Nickel is headquartered in Moscow Environmental and labor conditions are harsh and pollution remains a problem Prokhorov has invested heavily in pollution control However despite these efforts the mining areas continue to suffer from a high level of pollution 20 He converted Norilsk s gold mining interests into the US 8 5 billion corporation Polyus Gold Russia s largest gold producer In 2003 he oversaw the acquisition of Stillwater Mining his first international venture He resigned as Norilsk CEO in February 2007 and declared his intention to separate his assets from those of long time partner Vladimir Potanin The two engaged in protracted negotiations to separate the conglomerate Interros which the duo co owned since the 1990s into separate holdings 21 ONEXIM Group edit In May 2007 following the decision to exit Interros Prokhorov launched the private investment fund ONEXIM Group with assets valued at US 17 billion at the time As the separation from Interros proceeded and as other industries caught Prokhorov s attention the group rapidly changed its investment profile In April 2008 Prokhorov sold his 25 plus two shares stake in Norilsk Nickel to United Company RUSAL another mining conglomerate controlled by his fellow billionaire Oleg Deripaska in exchange for some 14 of Rusal stock about US 5 billion in cash and additional payment obligations of US 2 billion The deal has been singled out as a major success for Prokhorov as only three months later following a dip in oil prices a disastrous stock market crash halved the value of most Russian companies including Norilsk He emerged as one of the very few businessmen to have cashed out in time However his wealth has also been affected as the value of his remaining interests in various companies including Rusal and Open Investments declined sharply and as the remaining payment from Rusal had to be postponed but has since been fully paid citation needed In September 2008 ONEXIM Group acquired 50 of Renaissance Capital 22 a major Russian investment bank which has reportedly encountered liquidity problems ONEXIM purchased a small bank renaming it IFC 23 for the bank which Prokhorov had run in the early 1990s One of ONEXIM Group s divisions focuses on the development of nanotechnology investing in high technology projects such as white LEDs One of the key areas of development is the production of materials with ultra tiny structures used in energy generation and medicine As part of that focus ONEXIM purchased Optogan in 2008 citation needed In June 2007 the Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Fradkov announced the formation of the Government Council for Nanotechnology to oversee the development of nanotechnology in the country Prokhorov was one of 15 individuals appointed to the council which was to be chaired by then First Deputy Prime Minister Sergei Ivanov 24 In July 2009 the shareholders of RBC Information Systems agreed with Prokhorov s ONEXIM Group to sell an additional 51 stake for US 80 million half of which went to pay off debts The deal was closed in 2010 Prokhorov has business interests in mining and metallurgy Polyus Gold Intergeo stake in Rusal financial services IFC Bank Soglassye insurance company half of Renaissance Capital utilities stake in Quadra nanotech media JV and real estate development Open Investments citation needed In 2016 Onexim sold its 20 stake in Uralkrali and is considering selling off assets including United Co Rusal Opin PJSC and Quadra 25 In January 2022 ONEXIM Group sold 82 47 of the energy company PJSC Quadra ru to a subsidiary of Rosatom State Corporation 26 International investments and patronage editProkhorov owns a number of international investments In Israel he owns two private hospitals where he has paid for the medical treatment of friends such as Alla Pugacheva 27 In March 2004 Prokhorov founded the Cultural Initiatives Foundation as part of the Mikhail Prokhorov Foundation It is headed by Prokhorov s elder sister Irina a prominent Russian publisher At one time he financially supported CSKA Moscow s basketball hockey and football clubs and is a member of the Supreme Council of the Sport Russia organization He serves as president of the Russian Biathlon Union 28 He is also an avid freeride freestyle jet skier He performs tricks on a jet ski in a professional stand up achievement In the 60 Minutes interview he stated that a backflip is his most impressive trick 16 In September 2009 he made an offer to buy a controlling interest in the New Jersey Nets of the National Basketball Association and half of a project to build a new arena in Brooklyn 29 30 On 11 May 2010 the NBA approved the sale of the Nets to Prokhorov making him the majority owner of the team with an 80 stake He also acquired a 45 interest in the new Barclays Center sports and entertainment arena 31 32 He became the first non North American team owner in the NBA 29 In December 2011 after announcing his run for the Russian presidency the NBA confirmed that Prokhorov s ownership interest would not need to be altered in the event of his election Herb Kohl a then sitting but since retired U S Senator owned the Milwaukee Bucks at the time 33 On 30 April 2012 the Nets officially made the move to Brooklyn rebranding themselves as the Brooklyn Nets 34 In October 2017 reports continued to circulate that Prokhorov was moving closer to closing the sale of 49 percent of the Brooklyn Nets 35 36 On 27 October ESPN reported that Prokhorov had agreed to sell the 49 percent to Taiwanese Canadian businessman Joseph Tsai co founder and executive vice chairman of Alibaba The stake was valued at 1 2 billion 37 On 18 September 2019 Prokhorov sold the remaining 51 percent of the Nets to Tsai 38 According to Dmitry Razumov CEO of Onexim Prokhorov s investment was less than 1 5 billion and the overall sale was estimated at 3 5 billion with an income of about 2 billion 39 Prokhorov controls and is one of the largest investors in Sensorium Corp a virtual reality company 40 Controversies editAt a Christmas party for the Russian nouveau riche at the French Alpine resort of Courchevel in January 2007 he was arrested on suspicion of arranging prostitutes for his guests 29 41 After three days he was released without charge 42 In September 2009 Prokhorov was officially cleared from this charge and the court case was dismissed 43 According to the French prosecutor he had paid all expenses for the single women to travel to France but they were not professional prostitutes or working for a prostitution agency 44 Prokhorov made headlines in early March 2010 when he was forced to forfeit a 36 million deposit he had placed on the 360 million Villa Leopolda in the French Riviera in 2008 Under French property law once an initial sale contract has been signed a deposit can be refunded only during a seven day cooling off period On 2 March 2010 a court at Nice in France ruled that the villa s owner 71 year old Lily Safra could keep the 36 million deposit plus 1 million in interest citation needed Regarding Prokhorov s political efforts and the Right Cause party critical commentators claim that the entire endeavor is just a project of the Kremlin closely curated by Vladislav Surkov and that Prokorov was effectively appointed to be the party leader rather than being chosen by independently minded party members 45 46 According to them the puppet party was designed to divert opposition voters by using liberal rhetoric Prokhorov had run the Russian Biathlon Union from 2008 to 2014 and offered legal services to disqualified Russian biathletes 47 Prokhorov is one of many Russian oligarchs named in the Countering America s Adversaries Through Sanctions Act CAATSA signed into law by President Donald Trump in 2017 48 Russian politics editIn May 2011 Prokhorov announced a plan to join the leadership of the Russian pro business political party Right Cause 29 While not antagonistic to the Kremlin the party was seen as likely to support President Dmitry Medvedev rather than Prime Minister Vladimir Putin if the latter entered the 2012 presidential race In June of that year Prokhorov was elected to the leadership of the party at the Right Cause Party Congress of 2011 At the acceptance ceremony Prokhorov officially criticized the present ruling tandem of Medvedev Putin the structure of Russia and vowed to bring Russia back to a stable development course 49 However in September 2011 Prokhorov reversed course and resigned from Right Cause condemning it as a puppet Kremlin party micromanaged by a puppet master in the president s office Vladislav Y Surkov 50 In 2014 Prokhorov announced that he was considering moving control of his ownership in the Brooklyn Nets to one of his Russian based subsidiaries in an attempt to comply with Putin s order signed into law in 2013 51 that no Russian politicians should have foreign assets and equity and that all Russian companies should be registered and pay tax locally 52 In 2016 Prokhorov ran afoul of Putin when his media group Onexim specifically RBC Media published articles and news reports on the Panama Papers and Putin s son in law Kirill Shamalov s connections and offshore assets 53 Onexim offices were raided by the Federal Security Service as well as tax department officials in April 2016 54 The raids were officially described as part of an investigation into another bank but the FSB reported that tax violations were discovered at a number of commercial structures 55 A number of media journalists including editor in chief of RBC Media were fired after the raid amid rumors of pressure and opposition from the Kremlin citation needed In June 2012 he became the leader of the Civic Platform Party 56 In 2015 Prokhorov resigned as leader of the party and left it 57 2012 presidential campaign edit Main article Mikhail Prokhorov 2012 presidential campaign nbsp Prokhorov presidential campaign logo In December 2011 after the legislative elections Prokhorov announced that he would contest the 2012 presidential election against Vladimir Putin as an independent 58 He called it 59 probably the most important decision of my life 58 According to Communist leader Gennady Zyuganov and opposition leader Boris Nemtsov both saw the move as inspired by the Kremlin According to Nemtsov it was an attempt to preserve Putin s regime 60 He collected 2 million signatures needed to allow him to run for the presidency 61 Prokhorov said he would not base his campaign on criticism of Putin Criticism must make up no more than 10 I would like to focus on the things I would do he said 62 On 4 March 2012 presidential polling Prokhorov gained 7 98 of the vote 63 64 According to a poll by VTSIOM his candidacy was known by only 8 of the Russian electorate citation needed On election day Prokhorov said Initially I had no illusions that I was going to the presidential elections which are in fact dishonest Obviously preferences were made in favor of one candidate 65 Lawsuit against Grigory Rodchenkov editFollowing Russia s banning from the 2018 Winter Olympics and the stripping of medals from multiple Russian athletes in February 2018 Prokorov agreed to finance a defamation lawsuit in New York against Grigory Rodchenkov the former mastermind behind Russia s state sponsored Olympic doping program The suit claims that Rodchenkov defamed three Russian biathletes Olga Zaytseva Yana Romanova and Olga Vilukhina when Rodchenkov included them on a list of athletes who took performance enhancing drugs as part of a state controlled program that corrupted the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi Russia The women who were stripped of the silver medal they won as part of a relay team are seeking 10 million each in damages 66 In April 2018 Rodchenkov through his lawyer Jim Walden countersued Prokhorov under New York s anti SLAPP law asserting that Prokhorov s suit was frivolous and intended to limit an individual s First Amendment rights to free speech According to published reports the countersuit is likely to seek the names of other individuals who are financing the lawsuit against Rodchenkov as well as information about the assets of Prokhorov 67 Walden said he believes Prokhorov s lawsuit was intentionally designed to uncover Rodchenkov s whereabouts in the United States and allow agents of the Russian government to find him 68 Personal life editProkhorov has never been married but has been engaged twice Shortly after purchasing the Nets he vowed to get married if the Nets had not won the NBA championship within five years In July 2015 he rescinded the pledge saying that NBA Commissioner Adam Silver had taken his place by marrying his fiancee in May 69 Awards editIn August 2006 he was awarded the Order of Friendship for his significant contribution to the growth of Russia s economic potential when the President of the Russian Federation Vladimir Putin signed an order for the granting of state honors on 18 August 2006 In March 2011 he was bestowed with the French Legion of Honour France s ambassador to Moscow Jean de Gliniasty presented it at the French embassy in Moscow 70 See also editList of billionaires List of Russian billionaires Yo mobileReferences edit staff T O I Russian billionaire Prokhorov said to receive Israeli citizenship www timesofisrael com Retrieved 17 July 2022 Bloomberg Billionaires Index Mikhail Prokhorov Bloomberg News 25 June 2021 Mikhail Prokhorov Forbes a b c d e Brown Chip 28 October 2010 The N B A s Oligarch and His Power Games The New York Times Magazine Retrieved 12 December 2011 Mikhail Prokhorov The Oligarch Presidential Candidate RussianMind Archived from the original on 12 May 2014 Retrieved 28 September 2013 a b c Ioffe Julia The Master and Mikhail Are Putin and Prokhorov running for President against or with each other 27 February 2012 retrieved 12 March 2012 Spravka Sorokina o zalogovyh aukcionah 1995 goda i ih posledstviyah Metody i posledstviya privatizacii Norilskogo nikelya Kompromat Ru Compromat Ru www compromat ru Umnyj hvatkij s avantyurnoj zhilkoj Kompromat Ru Compromat Ru www compromat ru INTERROS 404 Retrieved 22 March 2015 Potanin to Split Interros Assets Potanin Vladimir Olegovich Baza dannyh www flb ru Agentstvo federalnyh rassledovanij FreeLance Bureau Archived from the original on 2 September 2000 a b Black Bernard et al September 1999 Russian Privatization and Corporate Governance What Went Wrong Stanford Law Review hdl 2027 42 41203 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Oligarchs The First Russian Capitalists Spotlight on Russian Oligarchs Thomas White Archived from the original on 1 September 2011 Mikhail Prokhorov The Moscow Times Black Bernard et al Russian Privatization and Corporate Governance What Went Wrong PDF Stanford Law Review Retrieved 16 February 2012 p 15 further reference to Ira W Lieberman amp Rogi Veimetra The Rush for State Shares in the Klondyke of Wild East Capitalism The Loans for Shares Transactions in Russia George Washington Journal of International Law amp Economics 29 737 768 1996 a b Prokhorov The Russian is Coming CBS News 60 Minutes 28 March 2010 Retrieved 5 March 2012 Mikhail Prokhorov The Russian Is Coming CBS News 25 March 2010 Retrieved 13 December 2022 UPDATE 1 Russian tycoon Prokhorov agrees to sell 7 pct stake in Rusal Reuters 11 August 2017 Retrieved 1 February 2018 Two Russian tycoons sell 3 percent of aluminum giant Rusal for 315 mi Reuters 11 October 2017 Retrieved 1 February 2018 Top 10 Most Polluted Places Retrieved 16 February 2012 Prokhorov Potanin to split Interros assets St Petersburg Times 2 February 2007 Straightstocks com Retrieved 22 March 2015 MFK Bank Profile Mikhail Prokhorov Russian billionaire BBC News 13 December 2011 Prokhorov Exits Uralkali Stake as Co Owner Strengthens Hand Bloomberg com Retrieved 30 November 2016 Oneksim prodast strukture Rosatoma 82 47 akcij Kvadry Interfaks 31 January 2022 Archived from the original on 1 February 2022 Retrieved 1 February 2022 Mikhail Prokhorov is treated in Israel and does not trust the Kremlin hospital Izrus 23 December 2012 Russian Biathlon permanent dead link a b c d Debevoise Pola 5 March 2014 M Billionaires Don t Do Guilt A Post Davos Conversation WWD Retrieved 6 March 2014 Bagli Charles V 23 September 2009 Richest Russian s Newest Toy An N B A Team New York Times A Russian tycoon with a longstanding passion for basketball agreed to a 200 million deal on Wednesday that would make him the principal owner of the New Jersey Nets and a key investor in the team s proposed new home in Brooklyn NBA Board of Governors approves sale of Nets to Mikhail Prokhorov NJ com 12 May 2010 Retrieved 22 March 2015 Prokhorov gets control of Nets ESPN with Associated Press updated 12 May 2010 Mamudi Sam NBA says Prokhorov can run Russia and Nets MarketWatch 12 December 2011 retrieved 12 December 2011 Araton Harvey 4 July 2012 Nets After a String of Homes Hope to Settle Into Brooklyn The New York Times Retrieved 1 October 2015 Brooklyn Nets owner eyes outrageous price tag in sale New York Post 16 October 2017 Retrieved 1 February 2018 reports NBA com staff Report Mikhail Prokhorov inching toward selling share of Brooklyn Nets NBA com NBA com Retrieved 1 February 2018 Mikhail Prokhorov agrees to sell 49 Nets stake to Joseph Tsai NY Daily News Retrieved 1 February 2018 Joe Tsai Completes Acquisition of Full Ownership of Brooklyn Nets and Barclays Center NBA com 18 September 2019 Retrieved 19 September 2019 Milliarder s neveroyatnoj intuiciej kak Prohorovu udaetsya raz za razom vygodno vyhodit v kesh i chem on uvlechen sejchas in Russian Forbes Russian edition 19 December 2019 Russian Billionaire Invests in VR Parties Startup Bloomberg com 17 August 2020 Retrieved 29 March 2021 Bryanski Gleb 12 January 2007 French spoil party for Russia s super rich ski set Washington Post Retrieved 29 March 2010 French police held Mikhail Prokhorov co owner of the world s biggest nickel producer with an estimated fortune of US 7 6 billion after he was detained with a group of young women in an upmarket Courchevel hotel on Tuesday Russen im Wintersport Der lustfeindliche Westen Suddeutsche Zeitung 23 January 2007 France drops prostitution case against Russia s richest man Sydney Morning Herald 29 September 2009 Bremner Charles Russian playboy flew in callgirls theaustralian com au Schwirtz Michael 16 May 2011 Mikhail D Prokhorov to Lead a Russian Political Party The New York Times Nemcov Prohorov sdelal oshibku vozglaviv karmannuyu partiyu Surkova Rosbalt Retrieved 22 March 2015 Mikhail Prokhorov Nets owner paid Russian Olympic athlete millions of rubles to keep quiet amid doping scandal report nydailynews com 7 December 2017 Retrieved 13 December 2017 Report to Congress Pursuant to Section 241 of the Countering America s Adversaries Through Sanctions Act of 2017 Regarding Senior Foreign Political Figures and Oligarchs in the Russian Federation and Russian Parastatal Entities PDF 29 January 2018 O Connor Clare 16 May 2011 Billionaire Nets Owner Prokhorov To Enter Politics And Take On Putin Forbes Retrieved 1 June 2011 Kramer Andrew E and Ellen Barry Amid Political Rancor Russian Party Leader Quits The New York Times 15 September 2011 Putin decree targets elite s foreign assets Financial Times 2 April 2013 Retrieved 30 November 2016 Billionaire Prokhorov Heeding Putin Call With NBA s Nets Bloomberg com Retrieved 30 November 2016 Savchuk Katia How Vladimir Putin s Son In Law Became Russia s Youngest Billionaire Forbes Retrieved 30 November 2016 Why Russian authorities just searched the offices of Brooklyn Nets owner Mikhail Prokhorov Newsweek 14 April 2016 Retrieved 30 November 2016 Rubles will roll Kremlin goes after business assets DW COM Retrieved 1 February 2018 Vesti Ru Prohorov obyavil o sozdanii novoj partii vesti ru Retrieved 22 March 2015 Prohorov reshil likvidirovat Grazhdanskuyu platformu i vyshel iz partii www mk ru 13 March 2015 a b Morcroft Greg NBA team owner Prokhorov to run against Putin MarketWatch citing Bloomberg 12 December 2011 Barry Ellen and David M Herszenhorn Billionaire and Ex Minister to Oppose Putin in Russian Presidential Election limited no charge access The New York Times 12 December 2011 The Times quote also said serious instead of important v the MarketWatch quote of the same date Retrieved 12 December 2011 BBC News Profile Mikhail Prokhorov Russian billionaire BBC News 6 March 2012 Retrieved 22 March 2015 Soldak Katya Russian Billionaire Mikhail Prokhorov From Oligarch To President Forbes Retrieved 30 November 2016 Russia billionaire Mikhail Prokhorov to challenge Putin BBC News 6 March 2012 Retrieved 30 November 2016 Doklad zamestitelya Predsedatelya CIK Rossii S V Vavilova k voprosu zasedaniya CIK Rossii Ob opredelenii rezultatov vyborov Prezidenta RF CIK RF Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 6 February 2016 Results of the presidential elections in Russia 2012 sobesednik ru M Prohorov Vybory byli legitimnymi no ne chestnymi in Russian RBK 4 March 2012 Russian Olympians file libel suit against doping whistleblower New York Post 20 February 2018 Retrieved 2 May 2018 Doping Whistleblower Sues Russian Olympians and Their Oligarch Backer an N B A Owner The New York Times 30 April 2018 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2 May 2018 Russian Doping Whistleblower Counter sues Athletes Russian Tycoon Retrieved 2 May 2018 Mandell Nina 29 July 2015 Nets owner Mikhail Prokhorov balks on marriage bet he made five years ago USA Today Retrieved 14 March 2016 Russian Capitalist Wiki contributors 15 January 2014 Mikhail Prokhorov Archived 23 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine Russian Capitalist Wiki Retrieved 13 Feb 2014 External links edit nbsp Media related to Mikhail Prokhorov at Wikimedia Commons Article about his 12 January 2007 arrest MSNBC 2007 Kommersant article about Prokhorov standing down as Norilsk CEO kommersant com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mikhail Prokhorov amp oldid 1215615177, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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