Rich and voiceless, Russia’s billionaires reached a record high during the war against Ukraine. Their fortunes grew, but their political influence vanished. Over 25 years, Vladimir Putin stripped the wealthy of independent power. Once-feared oligarchs now avoid public opposition. This reality benefits the Kremlin. Western sanctions failed to create elite resistance. Pressure and privilege instead secured compliance.
The Kremlin enforces loyalty through reward and threat. Cooperation brings protection, access, and profit. Defiance brings immediate punishment. Former banking billionaire Oleg Tinkov experienced this firsthand. One day after calling the war “crazy” online, officials contacted his executives. They issued a stark ultimatum: the state would seize his bank unless all ties were cut. Tinkov later said negotiation was impossible. He described the process as coercion.
Within days, a company linked to Vladimir Potanin acquired the bank. Potanin ranks among Russia’s wealthiest businessmen. His companies supply nickel used in fighter jet engines. Tinkov said the deal represented only three percent of the bank’s true value. He lost nearly nine billion dollars and soon left Russia.
When Wealth Once Meant Power
Russia once followed a very different path. After the Soviet collapse, massive state assets passed into private hands. A small group exploited the chaos of early capitalism. They built enormous fortunes and gained political influence. These men became known as oligarchs. Boris Berezovsky emerged as the most powerful among them.
Beresovsky later claimed he helped engineer Putin’s rise in 2000. Years later, he publicly expressed regret. He admitted he failed to foresee a future autocrat. His influence may have been overstated, but oligarchs once shaped decisions at the highest level. In 2013, Berezovsky died in exile under mysterious circumstances. By then, oligarch political power had already collapsed.
A Kremlin Meeting Without Objection
On 24 February 2022, Putin summoned Russia’s richest figures to the Kremlin. Hours earlier, he ordered the full invasion of Ukraine. None openly objected. They knew their wealth was at risk. Putin urged cooperation under new conditions. A journalist described the billionaires as pale and exhausted.
The months leading to the invasion caused severe losses. The immediate aftermath worsened them. Between 2021 and April 2022, the number of billionaires fell from 117 to 83. War, sanctions, and a weak rouble erased vast fortunes. Collectively, they lost 263 billion dollars. On average, each lost more than a quarter of their wealth.
War as Opportunity
The following years reshaped the economic landscape. Heavy military spending boosted growth. Russia posted growth above four percent in 2023 and 2024. Many billionaires benefited, even those without direct defence contracts. In 2024, over half of Russia’s billionaires supported military supply chains. Others profited indirectly from war-driven market changes.
Forbes analyst Giacomo Tognini stressed that survival requires Kremlin ties. Any major enterprise depends on government cooperation. In 2025, Russia reached a record 140 billionaires. Their combined wealth hit 580 billion dollars, just three billion below the pre-war peak.
Discipline Through Fear
Putin consistently punishes disloyalty. Russians remember Mikhail Khodorkovsky, once the country’s richest man. After funding a pro-democracy group, authorities arrested him. He spent ten years in prison. Since the invasion, almost all billionaires stayed silent. The few critics fled Russia, abandoning much of their wealth.
Despite sanctions, billionaires remain central to the war economy. Many face frozen accounts and travel bans abroad. Western attempts to spark elite opposition failed. Wealth endured. Dissent vanished.
Sanctions That Cemented Loyalty
Sanctions also blocked escape routes. Moving money abroad became nearly impossible. Accounts froze. Properties were seized. Analyst Alexander Kolyandr said this strengthened Kremlin control. Without alternatives, billionaires aligned closer to the state. Their capital now fuels war production.
The departure of foreign companies created opportunities. Kremlin-friendly businessmen quickly filled the gap. They bought valuable assets at discounted prices. Economist Alexandra Prokopenko described a new loyal elite. Their prosperity depends on confrontation with the West. Their greatest fear remains the return of former owners.
In 2024 alone, eleven new billionaires emerged. Despite war and sanctions, Putin retained firm control over Russia’s economic elite. In many ways, external pressure reinforced that grip.
