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Nornickel, a Russian company, recommends that the 2025 dividend be cancelled due to instability

Norilsk Nickel's board recommended that there be no dividend payouts in 2025. It added on?Monday, it was prioritising the financial stability of its company during a time of "elevated economic instability". Nornickel, if approved, would withhold?its annual dividend for the fourth consecutive year. In 2022 the Russian metals manufacturer's finances deteriorated because of geopolitical forces.

On June 30, shareholders in one of world's largest nickel producers and the largest palladium producer will discuss the proposal.

Nornickel hasn't paid a full-year dividend since 2024, nor for 2022, 2023 or 2024, due to Western sanctions and the falling price of its main metals.

The company stated that it was taking into consideration "the cyclical market for the metals it produces as well as the need to maintain high creditworthiness".

Nornickel uses free cash flow to guide dividend payments since a shareholder agreement that protected payouts at the end 2022 expired.

Sergei Malyshev, CFO, said that although EBITDA increased 9% in 2025 to $5.7 billion and adjusted free cash flow reached $1.5 million, it was "appropriate" to use the free funds to strengthen the company's resilience financially, to invest in the reliability and security of production and to reduce debt levels. Nornickel CEO Vladimir Potanin said in December that he believes the conditions will be right in 2026 to allow dividend payments to resume.

Potanin now owns 33,51% of Nornickel. He previously owned 37%. Aluminium giant Rusal is its second largest shareholder, with 26.39 percent.

Nornickel may not be subject to direct sanctions but Western measures have led some foreign buyers to avoid Russian metals. They also complicate payments and restrict access to Western equipment. This has caused Nornickel to redirect its sales to Asia. (Reporting and writing by Anastasia Lyrchikova, Alessandra Prrentice; editing by Vladimir Soldatkin & Alexander Smith).

(source: Reuters)