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Russia's Nornickel says financial stability is top priority, not dividends

Russian metals manufacturer Nornickel, said on Friday that the financial stability of the company was more vital then dividends but investors had the last word on the matter.

Dividends are a delicate topic for Nornickel, the world's. largest palladium manufacturer and a significant producer of high-grade. nickel.

Arguments on the problem have actually for years been the primary. reason for on-and-off rows between its main owners, chief. executive and largest investor Vladimir Potanin and aluminium. manufacturer Rusal.

Nornickel failed to pay dividends on its 2022 results for. the first time in 14 years, pointing out unfavorable geopolitics. However. the company resumed payouts for the very first 9 months of 2023. and paid to investors $1.5 billion in January.

Nornickel's 2023 net earnings and income

decreased

due to low metal prices.

A tax boost in Russia, geopolitical threats and western. sanctions on Russia in action to the conflict in Ukraine had. constrained business's development, though the sanctions have not. targeted the Nornickel straight, said Vladimir Zhukov, vice. president for financier relations.

We continue to satisfy our financial investment commitments,. environmental obligations, social commitments, whose expense is. really considerable, Zhukov stated.

Our viewpoint as management: preserving monetary. sustainability in the existing conditions is an undoubted. priority. But the decision is up to the investors, Zhukov. stated about the possibility of dividend payments.

The company had complimentary cash flow of $2.7 billion in 2023,. which once changed for financial obligation maintenance and other elements would. leave only $1.4 billion for possible dividends, exceeding its. January interim payments, Nornickel reported last month.

The expiration of a decade-old shareholder arrangement. protecting Nornickel's dividend payouts at the end of 2022 left. the company's future dividend technique hanging in the balance. A. dispute over the 2012 arrangement led Rusal to file a

lawsuit

against Potanin in London in October 2022.

Potanin holds a 37% stake in it, while Rusal holds 26.4%. and former Chelsea Football Club owner Roman Abramovich has a 4%. stake.

(source: Reuters)