Serguei Adoniev

Sergei Nicolaievich Adonyev (Russian: Серге́й Николаевич Адоньев, born 28 January 1961 in Lviv, then Ukrainian SSR now Ukraine), is a Russian businessman and entrepreneur, notably specializing in real estate, retailing, publishing as well as the telecommunication sector. An executive manager and shareholder, notably with Albert Avdolyan, of Mobile WiMAX company Yota, he is one of the key players of 4G technology in Russia.[1]

Sergei Adoniev is married and is the father of five children.

Joint Food Company

In 1994, Adoniev founded the Joint Food Company (JFC, one of Russia’s largest agribusiness companies), along with business partners and Russian billionaires Oleg Boiko and Vladimir Kekhman.[2] From 1994 to 2000, Serguei Adoniev was an executive manager as well as the majority shareholder of the company.[3] In 2000, he sold his shares of Joint Food Company. The company had then a USD 100 million turnover.[4]

Scartel/Yota

Since 2008, Serguei Adoniev is an executive manager of Russian Internet service provider Scartel (traded under the name Yota), specializing in Mobile WiMAX (G4) Internet technology. Yota was the first provider to launch G4 Internet in Russia.[5] Yota owns most of Mobile WiMAX licences in Russia.[6]

In November 2009, the company announced it had reached operational profitability for the first time (6 million dollars benefits and 250’000 customers).[7]

Investments

Throughout the years, Sergei Adoniev specialized into high-potential investments in Russian companies. Adoniev owns a blocking minority into Russian press group SPN Publishing House, which notably publishes Aeroflot corporate magazine as well as the Russian edition of Rolling Stone magazine [8] and various school books.[9] Adoniev has also invested in the Dighton Worldwide Investment AG funds,[10] specialized in raw materials trading on European, American and Asian markets.

References

  1. St. Petersburg Times 'Mystery money pushes Yota expansion', 13 October 2009
  2. In October 2012 Vladimir Kekhman was declared bankrupt in London. Goliath Business review
  3. Kommersant 'A former fruit importer at Yota', 2 December 2009
  4. Official website
  5. Businessnews
  6. IMPOFF 'Now in Russia, two WiMAX operators'
  7. St-Petersburg Times 'Mystery money pushes Yota expansion', 13 October 2009
  8. SPN Publishing 'Brochure'
  9. Dighton 'Official Website'
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