U.S. cannabis company Curaleaf has told investors that it is not subject to any sanctions against Russia although it has some ties to the country.
“Rumors and misinformation spread during turbulent times,” Curaleaf said Friday in a message to its shareholders posted on its website. “The speculation on social media that the company and its major shareholders and executives will somehow be subject to any U.S. government economic sanctions now or in the future is incorrect.”
Curaleaf
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said its founder, executive chairman and largest shareholder Boris Jordan is an American citizen who was born in Long Island, N.Y., and that he’s never been a citizen of any other country. He owns about 22% of the company’s stock.
“The substantial majority of our shares are owned by the retail investor community and institutional investors,” Curaleaf said.
Jordan worked in Europe and Russia for several years and owns businesses in the U.S., Europe and Russia, the message said.
Experiences Jordan lists on his LinkedIn page include chairman and founder of Renaissance Capital, an emerging markets investment bank, in 1995, as well as managing director at Credit Suisse in Moscow from 1992 to 1995. He’s also the founder, president and CEO of private-equity firm The Sputnik Group.
Andrei Blokh, who is Curaleaf’s second-largest shareholder, is not active in the company and is also a U.S. citizen who holds a Russian passport. Curaleaf described Blokh as a retired executive from the consumer packaged goods sector.
Blokh was president of Sibneft, a Russian oil company, in 1998, and in 2010 he was one of two owners of Unimilk to sell the company to French food company Danone
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in 2010, according to a Fintech Zoom report. He also invested in Curaleaf, which has been a public company since 2018.
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You can read this complete story at: https://www.marketwatch.com/story/curaleaf-moves-to-quash-rumors-that-executives-ties-to-russia-may-lead-to-sanctions-11646071560