Vadim Moshkovich is a Russian businessman and philanthropist. His business interests include major investments in agriculture and real estate development. His philanthropic activities focus on promoting high-quality education and development opportunities for gifted children. In 2014, Forbes magazine put his net worth at $1.3bn, 81st place among Russian businesspeople.
Agriculture Vadim Moshkovich entered the agricultural business in 1995, beginning with sugar imports. From 1997-2003 he began acquiring sugar processing plants, and in 2004 he established Rusagro Group. The company grew to become one of the largest vertically integrated agricultural holdings in Russia, working in four business segments:
Agriculture: controls 460,000 hectares in Russia’s Black Earth District, one of the largest banks of farmland in Russia
Sugar: controls six sugar plants, with production of 220,000 tons of sugar
Oils and Fats: production of 20,000 tons of margarine, 25,000 tons of mayonnaise
Meat: production of 80,000 tons of pork
2013 year end revenue was R36bn, and net profit was R20bn. In 2011, Rosagro Plc. conducted an IPO on the London Stock Exchange, raising ~$300 million. Vadim Moshkovich currently holds a 75% stake in the company. The company is expected to benefit from import substitution driven by Moscow’s ban on food imports from states that have imposed economic sanctions on Russia in 2014. Rusagro Group plans to expand its meat business to the Russian Far East, and to enter the markets of Central Asia. Real Estate Development Vadim Moshkovich controls Masshtab, one of the largest Russian development companies, focused on New Moscow, an area which was absorbed by the City of Moscow in July 2012. The company has more than 2,580 hectares in New Moscow. Upon entering the real estate sector, Mashtab hired McKinsey & Company to study the world’s most successful cities. These studies resulted in a development plan which, in a break with typical post-Soviet practice, aims to create an urban space that provides not only new residential blocks, but also ample social and transport infrastructure, and to facilitate local job creation in line with global best practice. Moshkovich cited the City of Irvine, California as an example of a well planned new city built on former agricultural land that continues to attract residents and create local jobs. In 2013, Moshkovich donated 307 hectares of land to the City of Moscow to be used for the construction of an administrative and government center in New Moscow.