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15 Awesome Women Who Outshine Their Billionaire Partners

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flavia sampaio

These billionaire wives and girlfriends are no bimbos.

Despite having access to all the money in the world, these women write novels, start companies, edit magazines and practice law.

In addition to their brains and entrepreneurship, many also happen to be gorgeous.

From the talented and beautiful Dasha Zhukova to the inquisitive and stylish Princess Ameera of Saudi Arabia, it's no wonder billionaires wanted to date these incredible women.

Dasha Zhukova is dating oligarch and billionaire Roman Abramovich, one of the richest men in the world.

Why she's awesome: The gorgeous Dasha is an entrepreneur, magazine editor and fashion designer. She's opened a contemporary art museum and her fashion label recently announced a collaboration with Urban Outfitters.

Read more about the amazing life of Dasha Zhukova >



Stephanie Seymour is married to billionaire Peter Brant. They recently reconciled after a rough patch a couple years ago.

Why she's awesome: Seymour is a former supermodel who has appeared on the cover of Vogue and in many Sports Illustrated swimsuit issues. She's also appeared on television and movies.



Salma Hayek is married to Francois-Henri Pinault, the billionaire who runs Gucci, among other brands.

Why she's awesome: Hayek has an Oscar nomination for the film Frieda and is starring in the recently-released Savages with Blake Lively. She also does philanthropy through UNICEF, helping raise awareness for child vaccines. 



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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Roman Abramovich Wins The Biggest Private Court Case In History

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roman abramovich

Roman Abramovich has won his $6.5bn legal battle with his former mentor and business partner, in the biggest private court case in British legal history.

The Chelsea FC owner, one of the richest and most private men in the world, was accused of black-mailing Boris Berezovsky into selling his interests in the oil company and aluminium conglomerate they founded together at a knock-down price.

Mr Abramovich in turn, accused Mr Berezovsky of extorting money from him for political influence and claimed he had paid him $1.3bn to buy his freedom when Mr Berezovsky fell out of favour with Russian president Vladimir Putin.

In a year-long case that became highly personal, one of Mr Abramovich’s associates even accused Mr Berezovsky of sending a threatening text message to a potential witness, signed “Dr Evil”, the pantomime villain from the James Bond spoof films, Austin Powers. The message was never produced.

Mr Abramovich’s lawyers also accused Mr Berezovsky of “truly prodigious powers of self-deception” and giving evidence coloured by his “vanity and his self-obsession.”

They claimed that Mr Berezovksy was an “angry and embittered man” of “remarkable vanity and self-importance” which was “aggravated by a highly personal resentment of Mr Abramovich.”

“Large parts of his evidence can only be described as mendacious and dishonest,” they said in submissions to the court.

“He believes that Mr Abramovich has supplanted him in a position which is rightfully his and that he has acquired a sort of political influence under President Putin which he once enjoyed under a very different regime of Boris Yeltsin.”

Mr Berezovsky was once a “classic power broker” and one of the most influential oligarchs in Russia but the relationship was founded on krysha - political protection – and “the activities of a krysha or protector are inherently corrupt,” Jonathan Sumption QC, for Mr Abramovich, said in a written statement.

Mr Berezovsky "thought he had personally created Mr Abramovich out of nothing and put him in a position where he had only to sit there for vast sums of money to flow into his lap,” he added.

Laurence Rabinowitz QC, for Mr Berezovsky, had told the court that the two men had worked together during the Russian privatisation sales in the mid-1990s that followed the fall of communism to acquire an asset that would make them “wealthy beyond the wildest dreams of most people.”

In the process they “became and remained good friends” he said, but they fell out when Mr Berezovsky, who had adopted a high political profile in Russia through his control of a television station called ORT, fell foul of the Kremlin and was forced to leave the country and seek asylum in Britain.

The television channel had run a number of stories criticising Mr Putin for the failure to rescue 118 Russian sailors from the sunken nuclear submarine, the Kursk.

That, he said left Mr Abramovich in a position where he was “in effect required to make a choice - to remain loyal to Mr Berezovsky, his friend and mentor and the person to whom he owed his newly acquired great fortune, or instead, as we submit, to betray Mr Berezovsky and to seek to profit from his difficulties.”

“It is our case that Mr Abramovich at that point demonstrated that he was a man to whom wealth and influence mattered more than friendship and loyalty and this has led him, finally, to go so far as to even deny that he and Mr Berezovsky were actually ever friends,” he added.

The case rested on a number of key meetings at the end of 2000 in which the two men and a third partner, Badri Patarkatsishvili, a Georgian businessman who died at his Surrey mansion three years ago from a heart attack, discussed transferring their assets to the West.

Security men working for Mr Patarkatsishvili secretly recorded the first meeting at Le Bourget airport near Paris and Mr Berezovsky later bought the tape for $50m.

At the second meeting, at Mr Berezovsky’s chateau near Cap D’Antibes in France, Berezovsky claimed that Mr Abramovich told him the Kremlin would remove his TV station from him if he did not sell it and prevent the release from jail of a close friend of Mr Berezovsky.

Mr Abramovich claimed there was no such meeting and the pair actually met at the French ski resort of Megeve a few weeks later and agreed to a $1.3bn pay-off.

In a last snub to Mr Berezovsky, Mr Abramovich allegedly sold his 25 per cent share of the company Rusal, the Aluminium conglomerate, for £1bn, to Oleg Deripaska, an oligarch with ties to both George Osborne, the shadow chancellor and Peter Mandelson, the former Labour spin doctor.

The sale meant Mr Deripaska owned 75 per cent of the company and Mr Berezovsky and his partner were forced to accept just £289m for the remaining 25 per cent.

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The Awesome Life Of Roman Abramovich (Who Just Won A $6.5 Billion Court Battle)

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roman abramovich sunglasses

Russian oligarch Roman Abramovich just won a $6.5 billion legal battle against former friend and business partner Boris Berezovsky in the biggest personal court case in British history.

The months-long court case stemmed from a longstanding dispute in which Berezovsky claimed Abramovich had intimidated him into selling shares of Sibneft (later bought by Gazprom), the Russian oil giant the two had invested in during the 1990s.

Berezovsky sought $6.5 billion in damages in the case filed in London's High Court last October.

But the British judge on Friday found Berezovsky to be an "unreliable witness" and dismissed his claims in their entirety, according to the BBC.

Abramovich, the billionaire of the Chelsea football club, must be pleasedthe ruling absolves him from paying billions of dollars to his former business partner, although Berezovsky could still file an appeal.

Life is pretty sweet for Abramovich. He was orphaned as a child, but today is worth an estimated $12.1 billion and leads a fabulous life, from his gorgeous girlfriend and palatial home to his massive security staff and celebrity-studded parties.

Abramovich is the owner of Chelsea Football Club, one of the top soccer teams in the world.

Source: The Independent



He just won a $6.5 billion court battle against "frenemy" Boris Berezovsky. It was over a decades-old business deal involving a Russian oil company.

Source: The Guardian



Abramovich has a security staff of 40 people, which reportedly costs him $2 million a year.

Source: The Daily Mail



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Roman Abramovich's Massive Yacht Is Docked In Manhattan

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eclipse yacht

On Wednesday, a private yacht sailed slowly and quietly up the Hudson River and docked near midtown Manhattan.

This wasn't just any yacht, however. It was Eclipse -- the largest private yacht in the world. And its presence is sure to touch off a frenzy of speculation about its owners and future.

(Read more: 'My Other Yacht Is a Support Yacht')

Seeing Eclipse docked off the midtown piers is the boating world equivalent of seeing a blue whale swim up the Hudson in the dead of winter. It just doesn't happen -- or hasn't happened. Eclipse's owner, the Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich, is famously private and averse to publicity. Eclipse is almost always kept in the rarified preserves of Monaco, Cannes, Portfino or St. Bart's, visible to other billionaires but rarely the hoi polloi.

By docking the boat in Manhattan, under the gaze of millions and a horde of media companies, Abramovich is, to say the least, inviting attention.

A spokesman for Mr. Abramovich declined to comment on the boat or its owner's reasons for being in Manhattan. But several dock workers and officials who have been briefed on the boat say it is scheduled to be in town until mid-April.

Some speculate that Abramovich may be using the boat as a temporary residence, since it is more secure and can better accommodate his large security force than a New York coop or hotel. Abramovich's partner, Dasha Zhukova, has announced that she is pregnant, and due in the Spring.

(Read more: The World's Largest Yachts 2012)

Eclipse has a crew of more than 60 people and a battalion of security cameras and sensors. It has two helicopter pads, two pools and a submarine.

At 533-feet, it remains the largest yacht in the world. But it may hold the title only for a few more months. A new yacht, called Azzam, is being built for a MIddle East billionaire that could be 590 feet.

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Roman Abramovich's Enormous Yacht May Stay In NYC For A Few Months

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roman abramovich eclipse yacht nyc

Last week, the largest yacht in the world sailed up the Hudson River and docked near midtown Manhattan.

The outrageously fancy "Eclipse" belongs to Roman Abramovich, the Russian billionaire who owns Chelsea Football Club.

No reason for the Eclipse's NYC stay, at Pier 90, has been offered by Abramovich or NYCruise, which operates the pier.

But it may be about a baby: Abramovich's girlfriend, Dasha Zhukova, is expecting a child in the Spring, and dock workers have said the yacht is scheduled to stick around until mid-April.

NYCruise touts itself as "home to the world's most spectacular — often fastest, biggest, and most luxurious — cruise ships," a fitting home for the Eclipse.

NYCruise is operated by the New York City Economic Development Corporation, which declined to comment on the Eclipse, and pointed us to David Keller, the President of Trans-Atlantic Agencies.

Keller said he could not discuss the arrangement, due to a non-disclosure agreement. He did note, however, that the Eclipse is docked at the only spot in lower Manhattan big enough to hold her.

A security guard at Pier 92, also operated by NYCruise, said the yacht belongs to a Russian named Roman, but offered no other information.

The yacht is in impressive company: Its neighbor is the Norwegian Star, the 965-foot cruise ship. On the other side of the Star is the Intrepid, the retired aircraft carrier turned museum.

The 533-foot Eclipse has two swimming pools, two helicopter pads, and a mini-submarine. It is equipped with a missile defense system and bullet-proof windows around Abramovich's suite, according to the Daily Mail.

There are 24 guest cabins, and the yacht is kept in order by an enormous, 70-member crew, according to Superyachts.com.

The yacht, built by Blohm + Voss in Germany, was delivered to Abramovich in December 2010, for nearly $1.5 billion, the Daily Mail reported.

The Eclipse made port at St George's Harbour in Bermuda on January 29, the Bermuda Sun reported, and arrived in New York on February 13.

Here are a few more photos of the yacht, taken from shore:

roman abramovich eclipse yacht nyc

roman abramovich eclipse yacht nyc

roman abramovich eclipse yacht nyc

YACHT OF THE WEEK: For $33.75 Million, Own The Luxurious, Speedy 'Harmony'

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Two Of Russia's Billionaire Oligarchs Hold Their Steel Empire Through Cyprus

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Roman Abramovich

To understand how much skin Russia's elites have in the Cyprus game, you have to check out oligarch holdings.

But these investments are complicated. For example, some of these investors have holding companies based in Cyprus through which they control their empires.

Others own holding companies in, say, the Cayman Islands, through which they own Cypriot companies.

So we've tried to figure out who the truly big fish are. Two of them are Alexander Abramov and his better-known partner, the 78th richest man in the world, Roman Abramovich.

Together they own Evraz, a giant international steel company that trades on London's FTSE.

Abramov and Abramovich hold their stakes in Evraz through an investment vehicle called Lanebrook Limited, according to Evraz's shareholder disclosures.

Lanebrook was incorporated in Cyprus in 2006.

Abramovich Yacht Eclipse Abramovic is well known for owning the biggest yacht in the world, the Eclipse (which was docked in NYC recently), as well as the U.K.'s Chelsea soccer team.

He also owns a Boeing 767, tons of precious art, Maybach limousines, a huge security detail and homes in Aspen and the South of France.

If that's not enough for you (it's not for him, obviously) Abramovic is also converting nine London apartments into one huge mansion. He's hard to ignore.

alexander abramovHowever, it's Abramov (worth an estimated $4.6 billion) who was made a Cypriot citizen in 2010 for "the highest level of service to the Republic of Cyprus, and considering his business activities, naturalization is in the public interest.” according to Cyprus Mail.

It makes sense. Everaz has been making big investments in Cyprus (from CyprusMail):

In 2008 the company announced its acquisition of a 51.4 per cent stake in the Cyprus based company, Palmrose for USD $1.06 billion (€0.83 billion), and as of June 2010 Evraz held minority stakes in two Cypriot scrap metal companies , EKV Invest (9.6 per cent) and RVK Invest (42.6 per cent). Evraz also has a 50 per cent stake in Cyprus based Streamcore Limited, which had net assets of $62 million in September 2009.

Abramov went to Russia's Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology and was a scientist before he went into business. Funding for his research had dried up due to the Russian financial crisis in 1998, so he started buying up steel and coal companies on the cheap.

He's also currently building the biggest house in New Zealand. The project has been kept under wraps but one of the country's top real estate agents told the New Zealand Herald it could cost as much as $40 million to build.

So these two gentlemen are likely a bit concerned about Cyprus' well-being.

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Roman Abramovich's 19-Year-Old Son And Heir Made His First Big Investment At $46 Million

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Arkadiy and Roman Abramovich

Billionaires probably don't have too many cares in the world. But raising well-grounded children is one of them, it seems. In 2011, Bernie Ecclestone, the Formula One magnate, spoke to the Guardian about his socialite daughter, Tamara: "Yes, for sure, she goes and buys loads of shoes and bloody clothes. Unnecessary. Completely unnecessary. I suppose it's because … one wonders ... and this is not in her defence – how many other girls her age would do the same if they could?"

Nowhere is the density of super-wealthy offspring greater than in Russia. Many oligarchs keep a tight lid on the lives of their children, but, occasionally, the public gain an insight. This week, for example, it was reported that Arkadiy Abramovich, the 19-year-old son of Roman Abramovich, had bought a stake in an oilfield in Siberia for $46m. Arkadiy, who is currently working as an intern at the London office of a Russian investment bank, acquired the oilfield in a complex deal via a shell company of which he owns 45%. That a 19-year-old even knows what a shell company is, let alone controls one, tells you something about the life of a billionaire's child

In true "like father, like son" style, not only has Arkadiy developed a taste for his father's investments in Russian oil fields, but in 2010 he was linked to an unsuccessful attempt to take over the Danish football club FC Copenhagen. It doesn't seem to be wildly speculative to suggest that Arkadiy might one day pick up the reins at his father's beloved Chelsea FC.

Ekaterina Rybolovleva, the 23-year-old daughter of fertiliser billionaire Dmitry Rybolovlev, has a similar taste for multi-million-dollar purchases. Last year, she bought New York's most expensive apartment for $88m– to live in while she completes her university studies in the US. Ekaterina's representative – yes, she has a spokesperson – confirmed to the press that she had acquired an apartment at 15 Central Park West. Press reports said the property boasted "10 rooms including four bedrooms, a wraparound terrace of more than 2,000 square feet, four bedrooms and two wood burning fireplaces". But it later emerged that the apartment had become the subject of a legal tussle as part of a bitter divorce between her father and his estranged wife.

Kira Plastinina, the 20-year-old daughter of Russian dairy magnate Sergei Plastinin, is also a busy student. While attending a university in Dallas, she also finds time to be an international fashion designer. Her retail chain filed for bankruptcy in the US in 2009 – when she was aged just 16 – but she now owns clothing stores in Russia. When she launched her label in 2007, her father reportedly paid $2m for Paris Hilton to attend the party in Moscow.

But not all oligarchs hand their wealth to their heirs. Anastasia Potanina, the daughter of metals-and-media billionaire Vladmir Potanin and a former aquabiking world champion, said in 2010 that she supported his decision to give away all his fortune to charity.

And earlier this year, oil billionaire Vagit Alekperov announced that he had placed strict conditions on how his son Yusuf, who works as an oil technologist in Siberia, would be able to manage his company once his father had died. "My son won't have the right to split and sell [the company]," he said. "Let him choose his fate for himself."

This article originally appeared on guardian.co.uk

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How Russia's Billionaire Oligarchs Got So Very Rich

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abramovich usmanov

Everyone's been talking about Russia's super rich oligarchs lately — first because of the banking crisis in Cyprus, and now because of the mysterious death of one oligarch, Boris Berezovsky, in London this weekend.

Expect the talk to continue. Berezovksy's death will lead to questions for the Kremlin, his former partner Roman Abramovich and a whole host of other super wealthy, powerful individuals that inhabit the world of Russia's elite.

So before we all dive in, it's important to know how those on top got to where they are.

The oligarchs are the product of the privatization of state companies after the fall of the Soviet Union. The Russian economy was in disarray and the government wanted to redistribute badly managed state-owned companies in just about every industry you can imagine in an effort to move towards capitalism.

In 1994, executives at Russia's only Swiss Central Bank accredited bank, Oneksim Bank came up with a  plan to help then-President Boris Yeltsin and his administration raise some cash while distributing the companies.

The plan was called "loans for shares." Russian banks lent the government money in exchange for temporary stakes in state-owned companies. If the government defaulted on its loan, the banks got to keep their stakes.

Of course, the government did default, and those with the capital to take advantage of this fire sale, like Oneksim Bank's then-president and Russia's 4th richest man Vladimir Potanin, became wealthy beyond belief.

At the time, reported the New York Times, Russian voters called this policy "prikhvatizatsiya," or "grabification."

From the NYT IN 1996:

When the auctions began last fall, it became all too obvious that a fix was in. Foreign investors were barred from bidding for the most desirable assets, and the same banks that were assigned by the Government to organize the auctions ended up winning them, and usually at only a fraction over the minimum bid.

Oneksim Bank, for instance, organized the auction for 38 percent of Norilsk Nickel, which produces platinum and a quarter of the world's nickel, and won it for $171 million, only $100,000 above the minimum bid and half as much as the rival Rossiisky Credit bank was prepared to pay. Oneksim Bank spokesmen say they disqualified Rossiisky Credit because it filed its applications late and wanted to guarantee its bid with treasury bills as well as cash. Rossiisky Bank said it would sue.

Shares in some of Russia's largest oil conglomerates, including Lukoil and Yukos, were sold off for what Western analysts considered to be a fraction of their real value. When the buying frenzy subsided, the Government collected $1 billion, half of what it had expected to collect.

When "loans for shares" started Boris Berezovsky was already a very wealthy man. He got into the auto business when the Soviet Union was crumbling and parleyed that into more successful businesses, including a super-elite club for Russia's new money in Moscow.

Berezovsky also kept a pretty high profile. His chauffeur was decapitated when a bomb went off near his Mercedes in 1994.

That was also the year he met his far less flashy former partner, Roman Abramovic (Russia's 7th richest man), on a friend's sailboat in the Caribbean. The two men figured out how to use "loans for shares" to take control of the state oil company, Sibneft.

Berezovsky would use his influence to ensure that he and Abramovic's bid won the company, and Abramovic would run it.

No papers were signed in this agreement and there are no documents to unseal. That ambiguity lead Berezovsky to file a $5 billion lawsuit against Abramovic last year, alleging that Abramovic intimidated him into selling his shares in Sibneft at a rock bottom price.

Berezovsky lost.

Some say that the fear of losing his fortune lead Berezovsky to commit suicide. He had a lot to lose, as estimates put it around $3 billion.

That means, compared to some of his fellow oligarchs, Berezovsky wound up just... okay. According to Bloomberg's Billionaire Index, Roman Abramovic is worth about $13.4 billion, another oligarch, Brooklyn Nets owner Mikhail Prokhorov is worth $13.1 billion, and the richest oligarch of all, Alisher Usmanov, is worth $21.1 billion.

The lesson here — It's good to be at the right place at the right time.

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Roman Abramovich's Spokesperson Denies Reports Of Oligarch's FBI Arrest

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Roman Abramovich

A press spokesperson for Russian oligarch Roman Abramovichis denying reports of his arrest, TV Rain reports.

Russia's RBC TV had reported earlier that oligarch Roman Abramovich had been arrested by the FBI.

RBC's initial report was quickly picked up by other news outlets, but few other details are available at present.

Business Insider reached out the to FBI who would not confirm or deny there was an investigation.

In a statement to the Independent's Shaun Walker, Abramovich's spokesman John Mann said that his client was in the US but had not been detained or arrested in any way. An official tweet from Mann says that the reports of an arrest are "NOT TRUE".

According to the Telegraph's Tom Parfitt, RBC's story was based on "rumors":

Abramovich, the billionaire business tycoon who owns London's Chelsea Football Club, has been in the news in the past few days after the sudden death of a rival UK-based oligarch, Boris Berezovsky. 

Abramovich had recently beat Berezovsky, once his business partner and mentor, in one of the costliest legal cases in UK history. Berezovsky's death is not being treated as suspicious at this time.

Shares of Russian steelmaker Evraz tanked the arrest report. Abramovich is a major shareholder in the company.

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Shares Of Evraz Tanked After That Report About Roman Abramovich Being Arrested

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Shares of Russian steelmaker Evraz, whose controlling shareholder is Roman Abramovich, slipped this morning on a Russian business news agency's report that the Russian billionaire was being detained by the FBI.

Shortly after 9 a.m. E.T. this morning, Russian news outlet RBC.com Tweeted that Abramovich had been detained in the U.S.

Via Google Translate the Tweet says, "Lightning! In the U.S., detained Roman Abramovich. Details soon." 

Minutes later, RBC.com posted a story on its site.  Then Russia Today Tweeted the report. 

A spokesperson for Abramovich John Mann Tweeted that the RBC story is "NOT TRUE."

The FBI declined to comment. 

RBC's report appeared to move Evraz's stock though.  Check out the chart from Yahoo! Finance.  The stock, which is traded on the London Stock Exchange, tanked right after 1 p.m. GMT, which would be right after 9 a.m. ET when the report first surfaced. 

Evraz chart

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How Dead Oligarch Boris Berezovsky Impoverished Himself Fighting Putin And Losing A Lawsuit Against His Old Friend

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Boris Berezovsky and Roman Abramovich

There's speculation that Russian billionaire Boris Berezovsky was murdered in his estate outside London this weekend.

But there's also a great argument for suicide. He was found unconscious in his bathroom with the door locked from the inside. Authorities found no trace of third party involvement in his death either, and they even tested for radioactive materials (they've been used to kill anti-Putin agitators before).

According to close friends, Berezovsky was increasingly depressed in his last days. In part, he regretted being the king-maker that put Vladimir Putin in line to succeed Boris Yeltsin in 1999.

Even more importantly, Berezovsky felt deeply betrayed by the man he mentored, Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich. Last year, Berezovsky sued Abramovich for $5 billion in London, alleging that Abramovich had intimidated him into selling his stake in their oil company, Sibneft, at a rock bottom price.

Abramovich argued that Berezovksy's stake was imaginary, that he was running Sibneft, and Berezovsky had only been the equivalent of a fundraiser, or an initial investor.

In fact the word in Russian is krysha— the man who provides protection, like a godfather.

It all goes back to the rise of the oligarchs during the privatization of Russian state-owned companies back in 1994.

That year, Abramovich and Berezovsky and met on a mutual friend's sailboat in the Carri bean. Berezovsky had already made his fortune in the auto business, media, commodities, and more industries. He was a high profile guy in Moscow's social scene known to have then-President Boris Yeltsin's ear.

That's why Abramovich needed him. Abramovich was wealthy in his own right, but super secretive. In fact, even after his meteoric rise to an advisor to the Kremlin, it was years before the Russian media released pictures of his face. In his early days, Abramovich lacked Berezovsky's connections, but he wanted to take advantage of the new Kremlin program to jump start the economy called "loans for shares."

Essentially, the program was an attempt to jump-start the privatization of Russian state-held companies. Banks lent the government money in exchange for shares in these badly managed companies. If the government defaulted on the loan, banks got to keep their stake.

Abramovich and Berezovsky had their sights set on Russian oil producer Sibneft. In his lawsuit, Berezovsky alleged that Abramovich agreed to give him 25% of the company. He also said the Abramovich agreed to give another 25% to his most trusted partner, Badri Patarkatsishvili.

That's why, according Vanity Fair, Berezovsky used his government connections and his control of Russian TV station O.R.T. to make Yeltsin a deal he couldn't refuse.

Berezovsky said he'd deliver the 1996 election for Yeltsin if Yeltsin ensured that he and Abramovich would win their bid for Sibneft.

And they did, but naturally there's no documentation detailing any of these agreements — not with the Yeltsin regime and not between Abramovich, Patarkatsishvili and Berezovsky.

From Vanity Fair:

No document shows that either Berezovsky or Patarkatsishvili owned any part of Sibneft. Abramovich says that this is because they did not in fact own any part, while Berezovsky says that this is because, given how deep his own involvement in politics was, an off-the-books arrangement was necessary. Abramovich made annual payments to Berezovsky and his partner, but this clarifies nothing: Berezovsky claims that these were dividends, while Abramovich objects that Sibneft never showed a profit in the 1990s, so there would have been no basis for dividends. In Abramovich’s account, these were essentially payments to Berezovsky for his political influence. 

Then Vladimir Putin came to power in 1999 and Berezovsky fell out of favor with him and moved to London. From London, Berezovsky openly used his vast fortune to take down Putin. Abramovich, on the other hand, stayed friends with the regime.

More from Berezovsky's testimony in Vanity Fair:

“In early 2001, Badri reported to me that Mr. Abramovich had told him he was being squeezed by the Kremlin to stop his relations with us, and that if we did not sell our interest in Sibneft, President Putin would expropriate it,” Berezovsky said in his prepared witness statement before the trial. “I understood Mr. Abramovich to be threatening that Badri and I could either sell our interest in Sibneft and receive some money (albeit at a gross undervalue), or he would ensure that we would lose our interest in any event.” Abramovich’s version is different.

He says that Patarkatsishvili approached him in January 2001, demanding a final payment that would serve to close the long-running relationship between Abramovich, the owner of Sibneft, and Berezovsky, the godfather. Whatever the truth, Berezovsky and Patarkatsishvili received $1.3 billion. Two years later, Sibneft merged with the oil giant Yukos; at that time Yukos paid $3 billion for 20 percent of Sibneft’s shares.

So Berezovsky felt like he'd been had. Unfortunately, the Judge Elizabeth Gloster did not agree. She said Berezovsky “had deluded himself into believing his own version of events,” and ordered him to pay the trial's legal fees.

It was the trial of the century too. Abramovich's lawyer, Jonathan Sumption, alone took home $12 million in legal fees. The entire bill reportedly wo totaled around $160 million.

Boris Berezovsky estateMeanwhile, Berezovsky was already in a tough spot financially after living a lavish life of properties in France and England, fancy cars (he had a 1927 Rolls Royce), and tons of security for himself and the 6 children he had with three different women.

In 2011 he paid his ex-wife, Galina Besharova, a $152 million divorce settlement (no prenup). His former mistress Elena Gorbunova was suing him for $7.6 million when he died too.

From The Guardian:

One Russian lawyer, Alexander Dobrovinsky, said Berezovsky "was in a dreadful, horrendous state; covered in debt, almost broke.

In 1997, Forbes estimated Berezovsky's fortune at $3 billion. In 2009 it had shrunk to $1 billion. This year he was not on the list.

He did, however, give Forbes's Russian magazine his last interview on Friday night (from the Telegraph):

lya Zhegulev, a commentator with the Russian edition of Forbes magazine, met the 67-year-old oligarch in the restaurant of the Four Seasons hotel on Park Lane on Friday evening.

Mr Berezovsky said had had lived through "many disappointments" in London. He said: “I’ve lost the point… there is no point [or meaning] in my life. I don’t want to be involved in politics. I don’t know what to do. I’m 67 years old. And I don’t know what I should do from now on.”

He said he wanted to return to Moscow: “I want nothing more than to return to Russia. Even when they opened a criminal case against me, I wanted to return to Russia… that was my main miscalculation: that Russia is so dear to me that I cannot be an émigré.”

Those are, perhaps, the words of a heart-broken, suicidal man at the end of his wits.

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Roman Abramovich No Longer Owns The World's Largest Yacht

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Step aside Roman Abramovich you're no longer the owner of the world's largest yacht.

Boat maker Lürssen announced late last week that it had officially launched Azzam, a 590-foot (180-meter) ship, placing it in the water near its Bremen, Germany facility. Billionaire Abramovich's yacht Eclipse, which previously held the title of world's largest yacht, measures 538 feet long.

While Lürssen has not confirmed the ship's owner, it's been reported that it was built for Sheikh Khalifa Bin Zayed Al Nahyan, President of the United Arab Emirates, who supposedly paid a whopping $627.4 million for it.

Superyachts.com attended the launch and shared some additional details:

Amongst many other features the yacht has a main salon with a length of 29 m and a beam of 18m with an open plan and no pillars. She will travel in excess of 30 knots, powered by a combination of 2 gas turbines and 2 diesel engines with a total of 94000 horse powers.

The interior decoration was undertaken by the renowned French designer Christophe Leoni who is proud to have been able to realize a sophisticated and luxurious interior in a turn of the century Empire style. 

The ship still must go through sea trials, and will be delivered to its owner later this year. The photo below shows the massive Azzam, courtesy of Superyachts.com:

azzam yacht


azzam yacht


SEE ALSO: The 20 Largest Superyachts In The World

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An Up-Close Look At Roman Abramovich's $1 Billion Superyacht

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Roman Abramovich Yacht Eclipse There's rich, and then there's the superyacht rich.

And yachts don't get any more super than Roman Abramovich's 553-foot long $1 billion plus flagship the Eclipse. 

The Eclipse is currently docked at Manhattan's Pier 90.

The following photos show a bit of what more than $1 billion plus buys in a personal motor yacht these days.

Just south of this public parking lot on the roof of the Pier 90 terminal sits Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich's flagship yacht, the "Eclipse."



The Coast Guard referred us to this website where we pinpointed the ship's position and confirmed it hadn't sailed.



536-feet long and styled after military vessels, we simply had to take a look.



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Here's How Much Roman Abramovich Paid To Park His Yacht In NYC

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roman abramovich eclipse yacht nyc

In February, Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich's megayacht Eclipse showed up in New York City and docked near midtown Manhattan.

The 533-foot ship stayed there for about two months, until after the birth of Abramovich's daughter Leah Lou, to mother Dasha Zhukova.

During that time, the Eclipse docked at Pier 90, operated by the New York City Economic Development Corporation. It's not cheap: A spot costs $2,000 per day, spokesman Patrick Muncie told the New York Times.

A two-month stay then, would have cost Abramovich $112,000.

It turns out that's not the most expensive spot in the city, at least not for a yacht as big as the Eclipse. Chelsea Piers, 1.6 miles downriver, charges $7 per foot, per night for docking, Crispin Baynes, sales broker at yacht brokerage firm Burgess says.

Baynes also pointed out that docking fees are just a small part of what Abramovich pays to keep the Eclipse running. Costs for food, fuel, upkeep, and salaries for the 70-person crew send the bill much higher.

Tim Thomas, editor of Boat International, estimated that running the Eclipse costs more than $500,000 per week, according to Forbes.

Based on the lowball $500,000 number, Abramovich's stay in NYC cost him around $4.1 million.

The Eclipse cost about $500 million to build, according to Forbes. It has two swimming pools, two helicopter pads, and a mini-submarine. It is equipped with a missile defense system and bullet-proof windows around Abramovich's suite, according to the Daily Mail.

It was the largest yacht in the world until April, when boat maker Lürssen announced the launch of Azzam, a 590-foot beast reportedly built for the Sheikh Khalifa Bin Zayed Al Nahyan, President of the United Arab Emirates.

SEE ALSO: 29 Reasons Elon Musk Is The World's Most Badass CEO

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HOUSE OF THE DAY: Russian Mogul Roman Abramovich Is Spending $75 Million On A Fifth Avenue Mansion

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Roman Abramovich fifth avenue new york city penthouse $75 millionRussian billionaire Roman Abramovich is reportedly buying a big chunk of a gorgeous Fifth Avenue mansion, and is on his way to owning the entire building.

Abramovich is in contract to buy three of the five apartments in the building at 828 Fifth Avenue from the family of late British real estate developer Howard Ronson for $75 million, reports Jennifer Gould Keil at The New York Post. 

If the deal closes at that price, it would soar past the current $54 million record for a co-op in the city, according to The Real Deal.

He's also reportedly in talks with other owners in the building to buy out their co-ops as well, and wants to restore the mansion to its former glory, reports Julie Strickland at the New York Observer.

The late owner Ronson dreamed of buying up all of the building's apartments to recreate the single-family mansion that once stood there. He passed away in 2007, and his family put his holdings in the building on the market for $72 million, which included the penthouse, a triplex, and a duplex apartment.

The eight-bedroom co-op is an interesting mix of classic and modern with tall ceilings and eight bedrooms. There's even a rooftop terrace that looks out over Central Park.

The Manhattan townhouse sits directly across from Central Park Zoo.



It's currently divided up into five units. Abramovich is in contract to buy three.



He's hoping to buy the other two and create a single-family mansion.



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HOUSE OF THE DAY: Roman Abramovich's $75 Million Dream Mansion Hits A Roadblock

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Roman Abramovich fifth avenue new york city penthouse $75 millionLast October, Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich was in contract to buy three apartments in a gorgeous Fifth Avenue mansion for $75 million.

But a new report in The New York Post says that the deal may be in jeopardy since the seller supposedly wants even more money.

Abramovich originally wanted to purchase three of the five apartments in the building at 828 Fifth Avenue from the family of late British real estate developer Howard Ronson, which included the penthouse, a triplex, and a duplex apartment.

But Ronson's widow — heiress Angelika Ivanc — is reportedly holding out because she believes she can get more money from the mogul.

According to the Post:

Ivanc is challenging the executors’ approval of the co-op sale in court in the English Channel island of Guernsey, where Ronson’s company had offices.

While a European court ruling would not bar the sale in New York, legal experts say that the controversy would likely be enough to force the parties to hold off on the transaction until the court case is resolved.

Even if the deal closes at the current price of $75 million, it would still be the most expensive co-op ever bought in the city beating out the previous record of $54 million, according to The Real Deal.

Abramovich has reportedly bought another apartment in the building, and is trying to purchase the final unit so he can restore the mansion to its former glory, the Post reports.

The eight-bedroom co-op is an interesting mix of classic and modern with tall ceilings and eight bedrooms. There's even a rooftop terrace that looks out over Central Park.

The Manhattan townhouse sits directly across from Central Park Zoo.



It's currently divided up into five units. Abramovich has made an offer to buy three.



He's hoping to buy the other two and create a single-family mansion.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Billionaire Roman Abramovich Has Reportedly Booked An Entire Luxury Hotel In Israel For Passover

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Beresheet Hotel Israel

Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich is spending almost half a million dollars on a Passover retreat in Israel, booking all 111 rooms in Mitzpe Ramon's Bereshseet Hotel to host family and friends for the upcoming holiday, a source told the Daily Mail.

 Abramovich plans to stay from Sunday to Thursday, holding a banquet under a specially-constructed tent in the desert outside the hotel for the first night of seder, according to Jewish News. He will fly into Israel with his partner Dasha Zhukova and their two children in a private jet, and then take a limo to the hotel. 

The estimated cost for Abramovich to rent the entire hotel is $450,000, which doesn't include the cost of the tent or any traveling costs.Beresheet Hotel IsraelThe source told the Daily Mail that the reason for Abramovich's visit is that he “want[s] to be close to where the biblical action actually took place" in the Book of Exodus.

The Beresheet Hotel is located in the Israeli desert near the ancient Spice Route. At 2,600 feet above sea level, the weather at the hotel is cool all year round, and guests are encouraged to bring warm clothing, even in the summer.

All of the 111 suites have their own personal entrance halls. The 42 suites on the bottom floor have a private swimming pool, and the 69 other rooms have balconies and views of the surrounding desert.Beresheet Hotel IsraelInside the hotel, there is a restaurant, lobby with fireplace, indoor heated pool, gym, sauna, spa, and a private movie theater.

See more pictures of were Abramovich and his posse will be celebrating Passover below.Beresheet Hotel Israel

Beresheet Hotel Israel

SEE ALSO: Roman Abramovich's $75 Million Dream Mansion In NYC Hits A Roadblocku

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Instagram Pictures Reveal What Life Is Like For The 19-Year-Old Daughter Of Billionaire Roman Abramovich

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roman abramovich and sofia abramovichRoman Abramovich lives an enviable life. The Russian oligarch and billionaire owner of Chelsea F.C. is No. 133 on Forbes' World Billionaires list with a net worth of $9.5 billion, and he has some seriously awesome toys, including a $1 billion super yacht.

So it should come as no surprise that his 19-year-old daughter Sonya, one of the five children he has with ex-wife Irina, also lives a pretty pampered life.

According to The Daily Mail, Sonya (who goes by Sofia) has an Instagram account where she posts pictures of her home in the English countryside, stables of horses, and scads of gorgeous travel photos.

Though Sofia seems like any other teenage girl who loves shopping, boys, and "Gossip Girl," she also posts updates of incredible experiences like attending a Beyoncé and Jay Z concert and going to Chelsea soccer matches.

Keep reading to get a glimpse of what life is like for the teen daughter of an oligarch.

Even though her father is worth over $9 billion, Sofia lives a fairly quiet life in the English county of Hampshire.

Like many teens, Sofia loves her selfies. 

She’s not a huge fan of school and studying. This photo's caption says: "Basically screwed #maths #alevel #failing #tangraph #whaisthis #completebull #killmenow #whydoievenbother"

Her home in England — where she lives with her mother and two younger siblings — is gorgeous.

Just look at that backyard.

She loves posting pictures from recent vacations, like her latest visit to St. Tropez in the South of France.

They also went to the Maldives earlier this year. (And when they travel, her family obviously flies private.)

Sofia loves horses and competes in international show-jumping competitions. She recently competed at the Longines Global Champions Tour at Horse Guards Parade in London.

Her family raises horses and has a stable on its estate.

In addition to horses, Sofia has three dogs and a cat. Here’s her German Shepherd with her mom, Irina.

The family also owns a Labradoodle and Cavalier King Charles Spaniel.

But probably the best thing about Sofia’s Instagram are her #TBTs of her father, Roman Abramovich.

 

Aww. You can see more pictures at Sofia’s Instagram.

 

NOW WATCH: America's Most Expensive Hotel Room Costs $45,000 A Night — And It's Non-Negotiable

 

 

SEE ALSO: The Awesome Life Of Roman Abramovich

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Insane Manhattan Mansion Roman Abramovich Almost Bought Is Now Available To Rent For $150,000 A Month

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Roman Abramovich fifth avenue new york city penthouse $75 million

The gorgeous Fifth Avenue mansion that Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich almost bought for $75 million is now available to rent for $150,000 a month, according to The Real Deal.

Almost a year ago, Abramovich was in contract to purchase three of the five apartments in the building at 828 Fifth Avenue from the family of late British real estate developer Howard Ronson, which included the penthouse, a triplex, and a duplex apartment.

The deal fell through after the seller — Ronson's widow, heiress Engelika Ivanc — reportedly held out because she thought she could get more money from the Russian mogul.

Abramovich had reportedly bought another apartment in the building, and was trying to purchase the final unit so he could restore the mansion to its former glory. Now it looks like that dream may never happen.

But for those with $150,000 to throw around each month, the eight-bedroom co-op is now available to rent on Stribling & Associates.

An interesting mix of classic and modern with tall ceilings and eight bedrooms, the home even has a rooftop terrace that looks out over Central Park.

The Manhattan townhouse sits directly across from Central Park Zoo.



It's currently divided up into five units.



Abramovich was hoping to buy them all and create a single-family mansion.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

The Manhattan Mansion Roman Abramovich Almost Bought Is Now Available To Rent For $80,000 A Month

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roman abramovich 828 Fifth Avenue Triplex

The gorgeous Fifth Avenue mansion that Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich almost bought for $75 million is now available to rent for $80,000 a month, according to Curbed New York.

The rent was price chopped from the original $150,000-a-month asking price from back in October, presumably from lack of interest.

Now the triplex is back, this time for almost half the rent. Curbed reports that the owner, heiress Angelika Ivanc, is spending time out of town with her children and is hoping to find a suitable tenant.

More than a year ago, Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich was in contract to purchase three of the five apartments in the building at 828 Fifth Avenue from the family of late British real estate developer Howard Ronson, which included the penthouse, a triplex, and a duplex apartment.

The deal fell through after the seller — Ronson's widow, Ivanc — reportedly held out because she thought she could get more money from the Russian mogul.

Abramovich had reportedly bought another apartment in the building, and was trying to purchase the final unit so he could restore the mansion to its former glory. Now it looks like that dream may never happen.

But for those with $80,000 to throw around each month, the eight-bedroom co-op is now available to rent on Stribling & Associates as well as Sotheby's real estate.

An interesting mix of classic and modern with tall ceilings and eight bedrooms, the home even has a rooftop terrace that looks out over Central Park.

The Manhattan townhouse sits directly across from Central Park Zoo.



It's currently divided up into five units.



Abramovich was hoping to buy them all and create a single-family mansion.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider
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