Berliner Boersenzeitung - Pressure mounts on US companies in Russia

EUR -
AED 4.191138
AFN 79.878322
ALL 97.993943
AMD 437.161209
ANG 2.042244
AOA 1046.410165
ARS 1352.527759
AUD 1.751823
AWG 2.054021
AZN 1.941862
BAM 1.954392
BBD 2.30404
BDT 139.459514
BGN 1.955655
BHD 0.430271
BIF 3354.90097
BMD 1.141123
BND 1.46673
BOB 7.885422
BRL 6.343384
BSD 1.141183
BTN 97.815663
BWP 15.226029
BYN 3.734476
BYR 22366.006468
BZD 2.292228
CAD 1.563972
CDF 3283.00999
CHF 0.936907
CLF 0.02784
CLP 1068.342241
CNY 8.19406
CNH 8.204218
COP 4723.746211
CRC 581.675784
CUC 1.141123
CUP 30.239754
CVE 110.546268
CZK 24.779461
DJF 202.800754
DKK 7.460092
DOP 67.725504
DZD 150.108842
EGP 56.534537
ERN 17.116842
ETB 153.480767
FJD 2.563247
FKP 0.841321
GBP 0.846
GEL 3.120989
GGP 0.841321
GHS 11.696395
GIP 0.841321
GMD 81.588084
GNF 9877.559201
GTQ 8.769681
GYD 239.450615
HKD 8.956336
HNL 29.669283
HRK 7.5386
HTG 149.662818
HUF 401.593627
IDR 18579.875199
ILS 3.987769
IMP 0.841321
INR 97.741331
IQD 1494.87084
IRR 48041.269389
ISK 143.998424
JEP 0.841321
JMD 182.138762
JOD 0.809026
JPY 165.038296
KES 147.490139
KGS 99.791159
KHR 4590.163189
KMF 491.256573
KPW 1027.040126
KRW 1560.154191
KWD 0.349491
KYD 0.951027
KZT 580.576585
LAK 24631.135432
LBP 102244.601049
LKR 341.224135
LRD 226.516539
LSL 20.220535
LTL 3.369439
LVL 0.690254
LYD 6.207715
MAD 10.458386
MDL 19.696067
MGA 5120.218217
MKD 61.566424
MMK 2395.695176
MNT 4082.154186
MOP 9.224874
MRU 45.239748
MUR 52.331479
MVR 17.578986
MWK 1980.989295
MXN 21.73888
MYR 4.832635
MZN 72.974251
NAD 20.220908
NGN 1777.230379
NIO 41.969998
NOK 11.516183
NPR 156.506231
NZD 1.888635
OMR 0.438765
PAB 1.141178
PEN 4.146859
PGK 4.686612
PHP 63.705485
PKR 322.009214
PLN 4.257809
PYG 9106.438475
QAR 4.154543
RON 5.035543
RSD 117.246918
RUB 89.576971
RWF 1620.394346
SAR 4.279836
SBD 9.533356
SCR 16.746435
SDG 685.247317
SEK 10.955509
SGD 1.468368
SHP 0.896743
SLE 25.504334
SLL 23928.774357
SOS 652.202625
SRD 42.475441
STD 23618.937607
SVC 9.984806
SYP 14836.737501
SZL 20.220713
THB 37.280095
TJS 11.3089
TMT 4.005341
TND 3.364886
TOP 2.672623
TRY 44.746922
TTD 7.739356
TWD 34.189863
TZS 2972.624843
UAH 47.414136
UGX 4131.023445
USD 1.141123
UYU 47.405842
UZS 14535.049819
VES 112.934485
VND 29689.161901
VUV 137.071104
WST 3.140952
XAF 655.484699
XAG 0.031201
XAU 0.000343
XCD 3.083941
XDR 0.816353
XOF 653.303986
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.663696
ZAR 20.220028
ZMK 10271.477243
ZMW 28.38592
ZWL 367.441069
  • CMSC

    -0.0200

    22.2

    -0.09%

  • CMSD

    0.0463

    22.23

    +0.21%

  • SCS

    0.2250

    10.57

    +2.13%

  • BCC

    1.8400

    88.65

    +2.08%

  • AZN

    0.1300

    73.01

    +0.18%

  • RBGPF

    1.0400

    69

    +1.51%

  • JRI

    0.0500

    13.12

    +0.38%

  • NGG

    0.4200

    71.12

    +0.59%

  • GSK

    -0.3250

    40.86

    -0.8%

  • RIO

    0.3000

    59.31

    +0.51%

  • BCE

    0.3200

    22.1

    +1.45%

  • RYCEF

    0.1100

    12.06

    +0.91%

  • BTI

    0.1100

    47.89

    +0.23%

  • VOD

    -0.0300

    9.91

    -0.3%

  • RELX

    -0.6600

    53.03

    -1.24%

  • BP

    0.1750

    29.46

    +0.59%

Pressure mounts on US companies in Russia
Pressure mounts on US companies in Russia

Pressure mounts on US companies in Russia

As a growing list of US multinational businesses -- from Apple to Levi's -- suspend activities in Russia, some companies choose to stay in the country despite the risks to their reputation.

Text size:

But they face mounting pressure: calls for repercussions are appearing on social media under hashtags such as #BoycottMcDonalds and #BoycottPepsi -- two companies that received letters from New York state's pension fund chief.

These companies "need to consider whether doing business in Russia is worth the risk during this extraordinarily volatile time," Thomas DiNapoli said in a statement.

DiNapoli has also sent letters to snack manufacturer Mondelez; cosmetics groups Estee Lauder and Coty; and brokerage firm Bunge.

A team from Yale University that keeps a list of companies with a significant presence in Russia said about 250 have announced withdrawal from the country since it invaded Ukraine.

The group said the withdrawals call to mind "the large-scale corporate boycott of Apartheid South Africa in the 1980s."

Many US companies still in Russia remain silent. Brands including McDonald's, Bunge, Mondelez, Estee Lauder, Kimberly-Clark and Coty did not respond to an AFP request for comment.

- Legitimate reasons -

Starbucks said that its 130 coffee shops in Russia are owned by a Kuwaiti conglomerate. The coffee giant has pledged to donate any profit from its business in Russia to humanitarian efforts in Ukraine.

Yum Brands said its approximately 1,000 KFC and 50 Pizza Hut restaurants in Russia are nearly all operated by independent owners under license or franchise agreements.

It announced Monday that it "has suspended all investment and restaurant development in Russia."

Some businesses may have legitimate reasons to stay, several experts in ethics and communications strategy told AFP.

Companies may be hesitant to leave because they make essential products such as pharmaceutical ingredients, said Tim Fort, a professor of business ethics at Indiana University.

"This is a time when (you've) got to pick your side, and it doesn't strike me as this being very difficult to pick," he said.

"Any one company leaving the country isn't going to tip the balance... but there's a cumulative effect," Fort added.

- 'What's going on?' -

A company as well-known as McDonald's can have influence in Russia at a time when the general population has almost no access to sources of information other than the official messaging on the invasion.

"Russians (will) be able to survive without the Big Mac, but (ask) why is McDonald's closed? What's going on? It's a more powerful signal in that sense," Fort said.

Richard Painter, a professor at the University of Minnesota, warned of "serious risks for American and Western Europeans who are currently in Russia.

"These companies should do everything they can to bring their people home," he said.

Painter said companies "should think about the message that needs to be emphasized: that Russia cannot do this to Ukraine... while at the same time participating in the international economy."

The economic sanctions imposed on Russia with broad consensus by Western governments "is really the best way to deal with Russia, as opposed to a military confrontation," the former White House ethics lawyer said.

Some companies may be betting the criticism will rain down in the short term but ultimately subside, said Brian Berkey, who specializes in corporate ethics at the University of Pennsylvania.

Other crisis situations, such as the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, led to calls for boycotts against certain companies -- but without much effect.

Support for such initiatives is not always unanimous, but "mostly people in the United States and in Europe are unified in thinking that what Russia is doing is clearly unacceptable," he said.

Mark Hass, a communications specialist at Arizona State University, said the economic interest of companies that have chosen to stay in Russia "outweighs the reputational one."

McDonald's, for instance, gets nine percent of its revenue and three percent of its operating profits from Russia.

But "if social media starts identifying you as a company that's willing to do business with an autocratic aggressor, who's slaughtering thousands of people in the Ukraine, you're in big trouble," Hass said.

"And it will hurt business more broadly than just in Russia."

(P.Werner--BBZ)