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A Russian reprieve for JPMorgan?

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Line chart of Share price, pence showing JEMA jumped after Trump's win

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Yesterday, we wrote about how Donald Trump’s resounding election victory sparked a rally in Russia’s Moex index, Austria’s heavily Russia-exposed Raiffeisen Bank International and various other Russia-linked assets.  

We missed a biggie — on Monday, JPMorgan’s Emerging Europe, Middle East and Africa Securities (JEMA) had jumped 18.3 per cent, its biggest daily rise in over two years.

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Until 2022, the London-listed investment fund went by a slightly snappier name: JPMorgan Russian Securities.

Line chart of Share price, pence showing JEMA jumped after Trump's win

JEMA describes itself in marketing materials as a high-quality, dividend-focused equity fund. Launched in 1994, it was one of the first ever to invest in Russia’s then-newly-open market, and has been run by JPM’s Oleg Biryulyov ever since. 

Obviously everything changed for the fund after Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. And, perhaps, it’s important to take a longer view:

Line chart of Share price, pence showing Zoom out, however....

The eventual closure of the Russian market to Western investors meant the valuation of the 26 stocks JEMA held in Russia were marked down to nominal levels, with sanctions having trashed their valuations. One of JEMA’s Ukrainian directors stepped down shortly after the outbreak of war. 

JEMA remains a good way to play the prospect of Russia getting de-sanctioned, however.

Months after the invasion, the fund’s board swapped its original benchmark (Russia’s RTS Index) for the S&P EMEA BMI (ticker: SPEMAUT), which covers “stocks from developed and emerging markets in Europe, the Middle East and Africa”. On Monday, that index barely budged.

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JEMA’s Russian securities now comprise roughly eight per cent of the net asset value of its portfolio. Lukoil and Gazprom remain two of JEMA’s top-five overweights. 

In the six months to last April, JEMA’s net asset value rose 6.9 per cent, marginally underperforming its new reference index. Chair Eric Sanderson blamed this on “high ongoing charges and its holding of Russian assets, which do not form part of the reference index”.

Post-tax revenue over the same period fell to £41,000. In the six months to April 2021, revenue was £4.3mn. At pixel time, the fund’s market cap stood just under $60mn.

“Separate and distinct” from JEMA’s market cap, as Grant’s Interest Rate Observer noted in August, “is £25.2mn in accumulated Russian dividends (with another £7.9mn expected), undistributed since the war began” and held in a custody ‘S’ account in Moscow.

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Per Grant’s:

Whether the JEMA shareholders or Vladimir Putin will wind up pocketing the money is a good question. Decree No. 442, signed by the president of Russia on May 23, authorizes retaliatory compensation for Western seizures of Russian assets. Surely, if push came to shove, Putin would not overlook the JEMA dividend pile.

[ . . . ]

Accounting for the aforementioned writedown of Russian assets, JEMA’s NAV per share stands at £0.50. However, if one were to replace the marked-down value with current market value, the picture would instantly brighten — it could, in fact, dazzle. NAV per share would soar by 813% to £4.54.

In April, to complicate matters further, VTB Bank, one of Russia’s largest state lenders — and one of JEMA’s holdings — filed a lawsuit in Russia against nine JPMorgan legal entities, seeking to recover $493.5mn held with the US bank in New York. JPMorgan has challenged VTB’s claims.

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On October 18, per a JEMA filing to the LSE, the Russian court granted VTB’s claim for $439mn in full against eight (including JEMA) of the nine JPMorgan entities named as defendants in the original claim.

The JPMorgan defendants have 30 days from the date of publication of the ruling to appeal. Under current Russian law, JEMA’s ‘S’ account assets cannot be used to satisfy the judgment. 

Has Trump’s election victory shifted the dial on any of this? Judging by JEMA’s share price jump on Monday, some investors seem to think the answer may be “yes”.

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More capital is not the answer

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More capital is not the answer

An interview with Yale’s Steven Kelly

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Money

Pair convicted over £1.5m crypto investment fraud

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Pair convicted over £1.5m crypto investment fraud

Two individuals have been convicted for their roles in a £1.5m investment fraud.

Raymondip Bedi, 35, and Patrick Mavanga, 40, pleaded guilty to fraud, money laundering and carrying out regulated activity without authorisation.

Mavanga also pleaded guilty to possession of false identification documents and perverting the course of justice.

The duo was part of a group that defrauded at least 65 investors out of £1,541,799.

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Between February 2017 and June 2019, the group cold-called consumers, directing them to a professional-looking website where they were offered high returns for fake investments in crypto.

The jury at Southwark Crown Court were unable to reach a verdict on a third defendant, and they will face a retrial in September 2025.

A fourth defendant, Rowena Bedi, was acquitted of money laundering. A further individual, Minas Filippidis, is wanted in relation to the same offences.

Bedi and Mavanga will be sentenced at a later date.

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The criminal proceeding was brought by the Financial Conduct Authority after the defendants were arrested last April.

The Financial Conduct Authority’s joint executive director of enforcement and market oversight, Steve Smart, said: “Bedi and Mavanga lured investors with promises of high returns on crypto investments, but their schemes were nothing but a callous scam.

“If you’re contacted out of the blue about an investment opportunity that sounds too good to be true, then it probably is. If you’re in any doubt – don’t invest.”

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Big Tech’s shift on Trump

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Big Tech’s shift on Trump

Outrage over his 2016 election victory has given way to wariness but also anticipation of opportunities

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Full list of drinks brands that have quietly cut alcohol strengths – which ones have you noticed?

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Major pub chain slashing price of beer at more than 900 pubs next week - how to get the discount and a free drink

A HOST of beers, ciders and wines have been quietly weakened – leaving shoppers demanding a return to their original strength.

Analysis by the Sun has uncovered a raft of booze sold in supermarkets which now have lower alcohol contents – most likely in response to hikes in booze duty by the Government. 

Some drinks have become more expensive, despite being weaker than before

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Some drinks have become more expensive, despite being weaker than before

In many cases the weakened drinks have also risen in price – a phenomenon known as “drinkflation”. 

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Bottles of Banks’s Amber Ale were changed from 3.8% to 3.4% in the middle of last year, while the price went up from 89p to £1 in Tesco.

One reviewer wrote on the Tesco website: “Been buying it for years but will stop now. I would also rather pay more for quality.

“There should be a petition to change it back to its original taste and abv.”

Read more on food and drink

A spokesman for the Carlsberg Marston’s Brewing Company Group, which makes Banks’ Ale, said its reduced ABV “supports moderation”, and argued the product still has “great taste and quality”.

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Meanwhile Compton Orchard Medium Dry Cider is now 4%, down from 5% last year.

Its manufacturers said the Government’s duty hikes had impacted the firm, but it added that customers also wanted lighter options now so it supplies a range of products with different strengths.

Wines have been impacted – with Sun Online previously revealing how mainstream brands including Blossom Hill and Hardys have lowered their ABVs following tax hikes.

Today we can expose further reductions. Taparoo Valley Australian Shiraz, sold by Tesco, was 14% in July 2022, at a cost of £3.99 for a 75cl bottle, but it has since fallen to 11%, with the same volume costing £4.15.

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One reviewer wrote: “This wine has steadily been reduced in alcohol % which has destroyed any value for money that it had . Thin and lacking in any varietal characteristics but what can you expect for the price?”

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Caparelli Italian Rose Blush 75Cl, also sold only in Tesco, has fallen from 12% to 11%, but increased from £4.29 to £5.50 in two years.

Meanwhile Tesco Green Ginger Wine has been reduced from 15% in 2022, when it was sold as fortified wine, to its current level of 11.5%. The price has also increased from £3.75 to £4.50.

Tesco said of the changes: “We work with our suppliers to ensure that our own-brand wines offer great taste and value for our customers.”

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The UK Government’s alcohol duty reforms introduced in August last year resulted in the biggest increases in booze duty in almost 50 years.

The duty paid on a bottle of still wine was pushed up by 20%, or 44p, based on an average alcohol strength of 12.5% ABV.

Wines that are 11% currently have a £2.35 duty imposed on each bottle, whereas any between 11.5% and 14.5% command a flat tax rate of £2.67. 

How much weaker have drinks become?

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Here we reveal the ABV before and after “drinkflation”.

  • Banks’s Amber Ale: 3.8% to 3.4%
  • Compton Orchard Medium Dry Cider: 5% to 4%
  • Taparoo Valley Australian Shiraz: 14% to 11%
  • Caparelli Italian Rose Blush: 12% to 11%
  • Tesco Green Ginger Wine: 15% to 11.5%
  • Carlsberg Danish Pilsner: 3.5% to 3.4%
  • Grolsch Premium Pilsner: 3.5% to 3.4%

For that reason many bottles were pushed down to 11%.

From February, duty rates will change again with a new system of taxation introduced to penalise higher strength drinks, and Labour has pushed through the change in last week’s Budget.

Under the new regime, the single amount of duty paid on wines between 11.5 and 14.5% ABV – £2.67 – will be replaced with increasingly higher payable amounts according to the strength of the wine.

That means a 75cl bottle of wine at 14.5% ABV will see wine duty increase from £2.67 per bottle to £3.21, based on a predicted RPI inflation rate of 3.65%.

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But for an 11% bottle the duty payable will be much less at £2.43, an enormous difference of 78p. 

The resulting array of weakened plonks have been dubbed “Rishi wines”, after the former Prime Minister who championed the reforms.

UN-BEER-LIEVABLE

Booze producers are also being incentivised to produce lower strength beers, with 3.4% bevvies falling into a lower tax bracket than 3.5% ones.

As a result Carlsberg Danish Pilsner, Grolsch Premium Pilsner and – as revealed today – Banks’ Amber Ale have been reduced to 3.4%. 

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Currently beer with a strength between 1.3% and 3.4% have a duty of £9.27 for each litre of pure alcohol, whereas beer with an alcohol strength of 3.5% to 8.4% carries a duty of £21.01 for each pure litre of alcohol.

The duty payable on each of these brackets are set to rise by inflation (around 3.65%) in February.

Do you have a money problem that needs sorting? Get in touch by emailing money-sm@news.co.uk.

Plus, you can join our Sun Money Chats and Tips Facebook group to share your tips and stories

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Little seaside town that’s the best place to live in the country has hidden beach and UK’s smallest harbour

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North Berwick in East Lothian has been named the best place to live in the UK by The Sunday Times thanks to its quick links to Edinburgh and community spirit

A SEASIDE town in Scotland with the country’s smallest harbour has been named the best place to live in the UK.

Located in East Lothian, just 30 minutes from Edinburgh, North Berwick is a quaint seaside town with 8,000 people.

North Berwick in East Lothian has been named the best place to live in the UK by The Sunday Times thanks to its quick links to Edinburgh and community spirit

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North Berwick in East Lothian has been named the best place to live in the UK by The Sunday Times thanks to its quick links to Edinburgh and community spiritCredit: Alamy
Seacliff Beach is a private beach near North Berwick that's popular with surfers and dog walkers - despite the charge to visit

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Seacliff Beach is a private beach near North Berwick that’s popular with surfers and dog walkers – despite the charge to visitCredit: Alamy

Its residents have reason to celebrate because the quiet seaside town was named the best place to live in the UK in 2024 by The Sunday Times earlier this year.

The newspaper analysed factors like schools, transport, culture, green spaces and broadband speed to name the UK’s most livable places.

North Berwick took the first place thanks to its easy connection to Edinburgh, which is just 30 minutes away by train, its thriving high street of independent shops and its community spirit.

The seaside town is backed by a number of sandy beaches, including West Beach and West Bay Beach.

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Read More on Seaside Towns

Beach-goers who want to opt for somewhere quieter, should head to Seacliff Beach to the east of North Berwick.

The Scottish Tourism Board describes it as a “hidden gem” and “largely unspoilt”.

Seacliff Beach is a private beach, which means beach-goers will need to pay to visit, with some holidaymakers citing a £5 parking charge in online reviews.

Despite having to pay to visit, the beach remains popular with surfers and dog walkers.

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The tiny beach also has a tiny sandstone harbour that’s thought to be the smallest of its kind in the country.

For wildlife enthusiasts, there’s also the Scottish Seabird Centre – an award-winning tourist attraction where visitors can watch wildlife through cameras on local islands.

On the cameras, wildlife lovers can spot gannets and puffins on the Isle of May National Nature Reserve, the biggest puffin colony on the east coast of Britain. 

On-site, there’s also the Seabird Café, which has a large seaside sun deck and a gift shop.

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Seasonal boat trips around three neighbouring islands also operate between April and September.

North Berwick is also home to fish and chip shops, ice cream parlours, quirky tearooms, coffee shops and independent shops.

Other attractions include playgrounds, tennis courts and neighbouring golf courses.

Overnight stays in North Berwick don’t come cheap, with hotel rooms in the town from £150 per night.

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There are plenty of other little-known seaside towns and villages to visit in Scotland, including Gearrannan, which consists of nine restored traditional thatched cottages that overlook Garenin Bay in the Scottish Outer Hebrides.

The small cluster of homes was originally built in the 1800s and is very typical of the “blackhouses” that could once be seen scattered throughout the landscape.

Today, the area acts as a living museum to the time, with visitors even able to stay in four of the remaining cottages.

What are the Sun team’s favourite seaside towns?

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THE Sun’s travel team share some of their favourite English seaside towns

Folkestone, Kent

With views of France (on a very clear day), the main attraction is the Harbour Arm, sitting at the edge of the converted train tracks and selling hand-crafted goods and amazing food.

The multicoloured high street with shops and restaurants can’t be missed, my favourites being Burrito Buoy for some amazing margaritas and The Folkestone Bookshop for some novels.

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You’ll need to pack your beach shoes as it has a stony beach over a sandy beach – but after a few drinks at the much loved pilot bar, you’ll hardly care.

Kara Godfrey, Deputy Travel Editor

Mousehole, Cornwall

The small sandy bay has retained its chocolate-box charm, crammed with weathered fishing boats and backed by pokey cafes and airy art galleries where seaside-inspired works hang from the walls.

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For impeccable views of a wild sea and homemade grub, head to Rock Pool Cafe which sits atop a craggy cliff and order a ‘make it yourself’ hot chocolate.

There are some impressive coastal walks – but be warned it can be hilly.

Sophie Swietochowski, Assistant Travel Editor

Cleethorpes, North East Lincolnshire

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Accessible on a spit of sand when the tide is out, this quirky little community art project is made up of driftwood, flags and mementoes from those who have visited to admire the huge swathes of golden sands and sparkling waters.

Sadly the original was destroyed in a fire in 2023 but an enthusiastic band of local volunteers are slowly re-building the landmark.

Lisa Minot, Head of Travel

And earlier this year, Sun Travel revealed the best seaside destinations to visit in winter.

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And this other holiday location is getting a huge new tourist attraction.

At the Scottish Seabird Centre, visitors can watch puffins through cameras on the neighbouring islands

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At the Scottish Seabird Centre, visitors can watch puffins through cameras on the neighbouring islandsCredit: Alamy
North Berwick is just 30 minutes from Edinburgh - the Scottish capital

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North Berwick is just 30 minutes from Edinburgh – the Scottish capitalCredit: Alamy

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US trade partners brace for tougher tariffs in Trump’s second term

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US trade partners brace for tougher tariffs in Trump’s second term

Steps taken in the Republican’s first few weeks in office are expected to be ‘lasting ones’

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