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Euroclear challenges Russian court ruling on €220 billion asset freeze

A Belgian civil court is now the battleground for a €220 billion legal standoff, as Euroclear moves to block a Russian arbitration order demanding massive damages. The clearing house, which holds the bulk of frozen Russian foreign assets, insists that Moscow’s judiciary lacks the authority to enforce such a penalty.

Euroclear challenges Russian court ruling on €220 billion asset freeze

The Brussels-based institution maintains that its actions remain strictly in line with European Union sanctions, which mandated the freezing of Russian holdings. Euroclear spokesperson Jorgen Muylaert stated that the company recognizes only the jurisdiction of Belgian courts, effectively dismissing the ruling issued by a Moscow arbitration court last month. While the Russian central bank has acknowledged the lawsuit and is currently crafting a defense strategy, the practical impact of the Moscow decision within the European Union remains negligible due to protective legal frameworks.

Despite the legal impasse in Europe, the situation carries significant international risk. Euroclear officials acknowledge that the Bank of Russia could attempt to target company assets held in jurisdictions deemed friendly to Moscow, such as China, the United Arab Emirates, or Kazakhstan. Of the approximately €300 billion in Russian sovereign assets currently frozen globally, nearly two-thirds reside within Euroclear’s vaults, making the institution a primary target in the ongoing financial conflict sparked by the war in Ukraine.

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