Russia sells stake in seized gold miner for $1.3B after three failed auctions

Russia sells stake in seized gold miner for $1.3B after three failed auctions

Moscow finally offloaded its controlling share in Yuzhuralzoloto at a steep discount after no one showed up to earlier sales

Russia managed to sell a 67.2% controlling stake in one of its largest gold producers, Yuzhuralzoloto, for 93 billion rubles, roughly $1.3 billion. The buyer is Moscow-based BTS-Most Holding, and the sale closed on June 19.

Here’s the thing: this wasn’t Russia’s first attempt. Three prior auctions in May and June all failed because no qualified bidders showed up. The initial asking price was 162 billion rubles, about $2.2 billion. The final sale came in at nearly half that figure.

A fire sale by any other name

Russia’s Federal Property Management Agency, known as Rosimushchestvo, had valued the stake at up to 140.4 billion rubles (approximately $1.85 billion) back in April 2026. The first auction on May 18 set the opening bid at 162 billion rubles. Nobody bit.

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A second attempt on May 26 produced the same result. Then a third try on June 10. Same outcome. Three auctions, zero qualified bidders.

By the time BTS-Most Holding stepped in, the price had dropped to 93 billion rubles, a discount of roughly 43% from the original asking price and about 34% below the agency’s own valuation from just two months earlier.

Yuzhuralzoloto is not a small operation. The company produced 385,800 troy ounces of gold in 2025, making it one of Russia’s top producers.

How Russia ended up selling its own seizure

The stake didn’t belong to the Russian state until recently. It was seized in July 2025 from Konstantin Strukov, a businessman and regional lawmaker, on allegations of illegal asset control.

Since the start of the Ukraine conflict, Russian authorities have confiscated an estimated $50 billion in assets through various nationalization measures. Some of those seizures targeted foreign companies that tried to leave Russia. Others, like this one, went after domestic figures.

What this means for investors

The discount BTS-Most Holding received, roughly 43% off the original ask, also sets a pricing benchmark for future Russian asset sales. If the government has more confiscated holdings to liquidate, and at $50 billion in seizures it almost certainly does, buyers now know they can wait out the auctions and negotiate from a position of strength.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

Russia sells stake in seized gold miner for $1.3B after three failed auctions

Russia sells stake in seized gold miner for $1.3B after three failed auctions

Moscow finally offloaded its controlling share in Yuzhuralzoloto at a steep discount after no one showed up to earlier sales

Russia managed to sell a 67.2% controlling stake in one of its largest gold producers, Yuzhuralzoloto, for 93 billion rubles, roughly $1.3 billion. The buyer is Moscow-based BTS-Most Holding, and the sale closed on June 19.

Here’s the thing: this wasn’t Russia’s first attempt. Three prior auctions in May and June all failed because no qualified bidders showed up. The initial asking price was 162 billion rubles, about $2.2 billion. The final sale came in at nearly half that figure.

A fire sale by any other name

Russia’s Federal Property Management Agency, known as Rosimushchestvo, had valued the stake at up to 140.4 billion rubles (approximately $1.85 billion) back in April 2026. The first auction on May 18 set the opening bid at 162 billion rubles. Nobody bit.

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A second attempt on May 26 produced the same result. Then a third try on June 10. Same outcome. Three auctions, zero qualified bidders.

By the time BTS-Most Holding stepped in, the price had dropped to 93 billion rubles, a discount of roughly 43% from the original asking price and about 34% below the agency’s own valuation from just two months earlier.

Yuzhuralzoloto is not a small operation. The company produced 385,800 troy ounces of gold in 2025, making it one of Russia’s top producers.

How Russia ended up selling its own seizure

The stake didn’t belong to the Russian state until recently. It was seized in July 2025 from Konstantin Strukov, a businessman and regional lawmaker, on allegations of illegal asset control.

Since the start of the Ukraine conflict, Russian authorities have confiscated an estimated $50 billion in assets through various nationalization measures. Some of those seizures targeted foreign companies that tried to leave Russia. Others, like this one, went after domestic figures.

What this means for investors

The discount BTS-Most Holding received, roughly 43% off the original ask, also sets a pricing benchmark for future Russian asset sales. If the government has more confiscated holdings to liquidate, and at $50 billion in seizures it almost certainly does, buyers now know they can wait out the auctions and negotiate from a position of strength.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.