MENU
 

PRE TAX NTA |$3.13

Value as at close of business on 4 April 2025

This fundie fought Vladimir Putin. He says there can be no peace deal

Bill Browder is so close to Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago compound in Florida that he can almost see the giant American flag that flutters over the resort.

The fund manager-turned human rights activist is in Palm Springs, Florida, for the latest leg of a promotional tour for his new book, Freezing Order: A True Story of Money Laundering, Murder, and Surviving Vladimir Putin’s Wrath.

A few hours before speaking to this column, Browder drove past Trump’s famous summer palace and tried to imagine the raids the FBI conducted there a few months ago. But his daydream was shattered when his companion turned to him with a joke.

“You know, I could really just turn you over there and Trump could probably make a lot of money handing you over to Putin.”

Browder chuckles as he recalls the moment, but his companion was right. Browder, who built a fortune investing in Russia in the late 1990s and early 2000s before he was barred from the country –  and his lawyer was killed for exposing corruption – has become one of Putin’s fiercest critics and, from all reports, something of an obsession for the Russian dictator.

Putin ‘is losing the war’

When Trump and Putin met in Helsinki in 2018, Putin famously raised Browder’s name in a press conference after the summit, accusing him of evading taxes in Russia and funding Hillary Clinton’s 2016 election campaign. There’s little doubt Putin would love to get his hands on him.

But the American-born, London-based former financier, who will appear virtually at next month’s Sohn Hearts and Minds conference, isn’t about to lie low.

He watches Putin’s every move and when asked about fresh reports tech billionaire Elon Musk spoke to Putin about negotiating some sort of settlement – which Musk has since denied – Browder is blunt.

“I know Putin and I understand how he’s thinking – and he’s losing the war right now,” he says.

“So, of course, he wants to consolidate his gains. Rearm, restock, take a breather, and then come back at everybody again.

“And, of course, we can’t allow that. He’s killed too many people. He’s violated too many rules and laws. He’s terrorised too many people around the world. It’s time to push him right back to where he started from and make him pay dearly.”

Browder has long argued Putin’s invasion of Ukraine was designed as a distraction – a quick victory that would help cement his popularity and power among a Russian populace showing signs of growing weary of his rule.

But with the war dragging on, casualties mounting and Ukraine fighting back hard with the support of the West, Browder says the war has turned into a disaster. And Putin’s missile attacks on Ukraine following the bombing of the Kerch Bridge – previously a powerful symbol of Putin’s hold on Crimea – was an act of desperation.

“He’s looking like a fool to his domestic audience, and he needed to do something to show them that he wasn’t weak,” he says.

Missile attacks embolden Biden

The attack has backfired badly, Browder says. “He ends up killing 14 Ukrainians and, most importantly, he ends up disgusting the whole world to the extent that Joe Biden, who had been withholding really serious missile defence systems, now offers them up. And so, where’s Putin now? Is he better off from this? No, he’s much worse off.”

Could the disastrous military campaign, which has now extended to conscription, finally deliver the uprising against Putin that British spy chief Sir Jeremy Fleming is now predicting?

Many dictators have fallen

Browder isn’t confident, arguing the strength of Putin’s 500,000-strong personal guard makes him hard to topple.

“I would never bet against Putin because he has such an apparatus of repression in Russia,” he says.

“The most likely scenario is we’re sitting here years from now having a strange and unpleasant reflection on Putin.

“But ... we’ve seen many, many dictators all over the world who were totally impenetrable, fall. That could happen here … and the prerequisites for him falling are more in place now than they’ve ever been before.”

Browder’s long, complicated and fascinating history with Russia stretches back almost a century. His grandfather, Earl Browder, was a radical who moved to Russia in 1927, married a Russian woman and returned to the US to become the leader of the Communist Party from 1930 to 1945, running for US president in 1936 and 1940.

In 1996, Browder and his business partner Edmond Safra founded Hermitage Capital Management, using $US25 million of seed capital to invest in the rapidly privatising Russian economy.

The Russian financial crisis of 1998 almost wiped out the firm, but Browder slowly rebuilt Hermitage with a new modus operandi: activist investor.

Exposing corruption

Browder publicly and aggressively exposed examples of corruption in the Russian economy, agitating for change and enjoying the financial benefits as the management of companies was replaced and the Russian market re-rated the stocks in question.

It was dangerous work, but it was also lucrative; Hermitage became one of the biggest foreign investors in Russia.

Browder was originally a supporter of Putin, figuring he might actually help reduce corruption in the Russian economy. But in 2006, Browder was blacklisted by the Russian government as a threat to national security and barred from the country.

A year later, Russian law enforcement orchestrated a scam where they claimed and received a $US230 million tax rebate on behalf of three Hermitage companies. In 2008, a Hermitage auditor and lawyer, Sergei Magnitsky, was arrested after exposing the scam; 11 months later he was dead, murdered by prison guards.

Browder switched from activist investor to human rights activist, successfully campaigning for the US – and later Australia, thanks to the late Labor senator Kimberley Kitching – to adopt what has become known as the Magnitsky Act. The law seeks to give the governments of developed countries, where bad actors might seek to park capital, the power to freeze assets and ban villains from entering the country.

Browder says 35 countries have now adopted the laws and his main focus now is getting them to use the law more frequently.

“If Australia and the UK and the US start using it a lot, then also all the bad guys around the world will start to think that the probability is high that if they do something terrible, it will be used against them – and therefore they don’t do something terrible. That’s the main goal.”

Browder is relieved to be out of markets – “It really is a toxic brew right now” – but says the outlook for the Russian economy is decidedly mixed.

Russian a global pariah

While the country is being starved of technological imports (particularly computer chips) and foreign investment, high oil, gas and metals prices are helping. But Browder questions how long that strength lasts.

Russia’s gas customers in Europe are unlikely to buy from it again and its oil earnings will eventually be hurt by a combination of lack of access to vital services (including drilling and maintenance) and the impact of a global recession on prices.

“That combination of things, I think, will basically deal a death blow to Russia because they have no access to the capital markets, no one’s going to lend them money in the future, and they have no access to their foreign currency reserves because it’s all been frozen.”

Browder is keeping the topic of his address to the Sohn Hearts & Minds conference under wraps for now; the conference, which raises money for medical research, will bring present the top stock tips from mangers from around the globe. But you can bet one man will cast a long shadow over Browder’s speech, and his fascinating life.

The Financial Review is a media partner of the Sohn Hearts & Mind conference

 

 

 

This article was originally posted by The Australian Financial Review here.

Licensed by Copyright Agency. You must not copy this work without permission.

Disclaimer: This material has been prepared by AFR, published on 13 October 2022. HM1 is not responsible for the content of linked websites or content prepared by third party. The inclusion of these links and third-party content does not in any way imply any form of endorsement by HM1 of the products or services provided by persons or organisations who are responsible for the linked websites and third-party content. This information is for general information only and does not consider the objectives, financial situation or needs of any person. Before making an investment decision, you should read the relevant disclosure document (if appropriate) and seek professional advice to determine whether the investment and information is suitable for you.

Recent Posts

Read the latest insights
A curated list of HM1 investor updates, portfolio news and other interesting articles.
Read More
Portfolio Update: Opthea
We provide an update on Opthea following the unsuccessful Phase III trial results.
Geoff Wilson on investing lessons, mistakes, the banks, and why you should get on X
Geoff Wilson reveals why he's cautious on markets and some of his biggest lessons and tips in the investment space.
Reporting Season Insights: HM1 Core Portfolio Holdings
We spoke to our dedicated fund managers for an update on some of our major portfolio holdings following reporting season.
The investing megatrends you can’t ignore (and some you should rethink)
James Marlay of Livewire sat down with Vihari Ross of Antipodes (HM1 Conference Fund Manager) and James Tsinidis of Munro Partners (HM1 Core Fund Manager) to discuss the biggest megatrends shaping the future.
 

Portfolio Update: Opthea

We provide an update on Opthea following the unsuccessful Phase III trial results.

Read More
April 8th, 2025
 

Geoff Wilson on investing lessons, mistakes, the banks, and why you should get on X

Geoff Wilson reveals why he's cautious on markets and some of his biggest lessons and tips in the investment space.

Read More
March 11th, 2025
 

Reporting Season Insights: HM1 Core Portfolio Holdings

We spoke to our dedicated fund managers for an update on some of our major portfolio holdings following reporting season.

Read More
March 10th, 2025
 

The investing megatrends you can’t ignore (and some you should rethink)

James Marlay of Livewire sat down with Vihari Ross of Antipodes (HM1 Conference Fund Manager) and James Tsinidis of Munro Partners (HM1 Core Fund Manager) to discuss the biggest megatrends shaping the future.

Read More
March 3rd, 2025
 

2025: Where to Find Market Opportunities

There are opportunities abound for investors with an active management mindset in 2025. Get more insights from one of HM1's Core Fund managers, Magellan.

Read More
February 25th, 2025
 

Significant increase in profit and increased fully franked dividend

We're pleased to declare an increased half-year fully franked dividend of 8.0 cents per share payable in April 2025.

Read More
February 20th, 2025
 

Magellan's Elisa Di Marco - 3 Trends That Will Define The Next Decade

Elisa Di Marco of Magellan (HM1 Core Fund Manager) joined Equity Mates to unpack 3 big megatrends shaping our world today (and how we can invest in them).

Read More
February 7th, 2025
 

Nine top stock picks to prepare your portfolio for 2025

Health care, ride-sharing, and the emerging world of YouTube entertainers are among the industries leading investors have picked for growth in 2025.

Read More
January 21st, 2025
 

Resources fundies reveal top picks ahead of ‘stellar’ 2025

Some of Australia’s biggest resources funds are gearing up for a bumper start to the new year.

Read More
January 6th, 2025
 

Qiao Ma: finding killer companies, surviving the GFC & why founders win

Qiao Ma, Portfolio Manager of the Munro Partners joins Owen Rask on The Australian Investors Podcast.

Read More
January 6th, 2025
 

10 top fund managers reveal their long-term stock picks

With valuations stretched and geopolitical tensions high, the new year offers plenty of potholes for investors. 

Read More
December 28th, 2024
 

Rikki Bannan – Don’t get caught up in momentum

Conference Fund Manager Rikki Bannan, Executive Director at IFM Investors, joins Equity Mates to discuss her standout 2023 stock pick, Telix, and explore what opportunities lie ahead.

Read More
December 19th, 2024
 

Professor Jane Butler: Sparking Hope for Spinal Cord Injuries

In this episode of the Hearts & Minds Podcast, we sit down with Professor Jane Butler to discuss her groundbreaking research into spinal cord injuries.

Read More
December 10th, 2024
 

Nick Griffin – The Nvidia story is not over

Nick Griffin, Founding Partner & Chief Investment Officer of Munro Partners joined the Equity Mates podcast in their Summer Series.

Read More
December 9th, 2024
 

HM1 CEO Succession

Hearts and Minds Investments Limited advises that Paul Rayson intends to retire from the position of Chief Executive Officer, effective 19 February 2025.

Read More
December 5th, 2024
 

How Trump will impact equity markets

The United States has spoken. President Trump has returned to the White House. But how can we cut through the noise to reveal the investment, economic and geopolitical ramifications?

Read More
November 26th, 2024
 

Trump unifies top investors in decade-long bullish outlook for US

Nick Moakes, CIO of the $72 billion Wellcome Trust, told the conference that too many investors were banking on a return to the ultra-low interest rates that prevailed over the past decade.

Read More
November 20th, 2024
 

These rock-star stock picks could get markets talking next year

Eleven rock stars of international and local funds management took to stage – each tasked with picking and pitching one company whose shares will take off over the next year.

Read More
November 18th, 2024
 

Is anyone brave or stupid enough to bet against America?

Stock pickers have been punished for betting against the US. The choice between consensus and contrarianism on American exceptionalism is now harder than ever.

Read More
November 17th, 2024
 

Sohn: NYSE-listed Estee Lauder’s Northcape Capital pick

Northcape Capital’s Fleur Wright this gives a rare opportunity to buy a high quality company at an attractive price.

Read More
November 15th, 2024
 

Sohn ASX stock pick: Ellerston Capital’s Chris Kourtis backs Perpetual

Chris Kourtis has put his biggest bet on embattled Perpetual – picking one of the most hated stocks on the ASX – that he believes will soon be the ‘cheapest listed asset manager of scale in the universe’.

Read More
November 15th, 2024
 

AI start-ups a threat to incumbent big companies

Paul Bassat predicts emerging artificial intelligence companies will disrupt sectors and overtake established incumbent companies just as rapidly as the seismic shifts that took place when the internet emerged in the mid-1990s.

Read More
November 15th, 2024
 

Howard Marks and Sohn’s big stars reveal seven rules for investing

Among the stock picks and stunts at the Sohh Hearts & Minds event, Howard Marks and Nick Moakes provided investors with long-term rules for playing markets.

Read More
November 15th, 2024
 

Sohn investors position for bullish but bumpy Trump ride

Australia and the rest of the world must adjust to a new Trump presidency that will deliver an expected bull market but also disruption, with the leader in waiting prepared to “create pain” to get his way.

Read More
November 15th, 2024
 

Sohn stock picker experts name best shares to invest in for year ahead

‍Don’t overlook down and out silver miners, legacy skincare brands ready for a revival and a big financial company suffering from a severe case of shareholder wealth destruction.

Read More
November 15th, 2024
 

Eleven stock tips from Sohn to get you through 2025

“There’s no finer place for the finance festival than in the festival city,” said Matthew Grounds. He, along with fellow Barrenjoey co-executive chairman Guy Fowler and investor Gary Weiss, is one of Sohn’s driving forces.

Read More
November 15th, 2024
 

Sohn Hearts & Minds Investments fund targets $1.5bn valuation

‍Hearts & Minds Investments chair Chris Cuffe is hoping for HM1 to grow to more than $1.5bn in the next five years.

Read More
November 14th, 2024
 

Galaxy Digital CEO Mike Novogratz believes bitcoin will hit $US100k

Bitcoin’s bounce to record highs in recent days is only the beginning of a fresh surge higher for cryptocurrency, says US billionaire Mike Novogratz.

Read More
November 9th, 2024
 

Why this New York hedge fund manager sees opportunity in European stocks

Influential New York-hedge fund manager Ricky Sandler will turn to Europe for his next stock pick.

Read More
November 6th, 2024
 

Antipodes’ Ross says short-term wealth hinges on US election

The portfolio manager says defensive stocks pose a bigger risk than the magnificent seven for investors that are overexposed to the American sharemarket.

Read More
November 5th, 2024