Visa and MasterCard can avoid paying a security deposit of up to $2.9 billion if they can find Russian partners to process payments within the country by Oct. 31, Central Bank chief Elvira Nabiullina said Tuesday at a banking conference in St. Petersburg, PRIME reported.
Reuters reported earlier that MasterCard had already started searching for a Russian partner to help it circumvent the law.
Also Tuesday, President Vladimir Putin signed a law giving the government and the Central Bank the right to determine the specifics of how international payment systems will pay the security deposit, as well as to decide how fines will be levied for failing to pay.
With this new legislation, the government has effectively backtracked on a controversial law passed in May that had risked pushing Visa and MasterCard out of the Russian market altogether.
The two companies, which together process about 90 percent of payments in Russia, inadvertently set off a movement to end Russia's dependence on foreign payment systems when they halted service to two Russian banks in March to comply with U.S. sanctions imposed following the annexation of Crimea.
The earlier law, which was signed by Putin in May, both lay the groundwork for creating a national payment system to replace foreign players and required international payment systems to submit a massive security deposit to the Central Bank in order to continue operating in Russia.
Morgan Stanley analysts previously estimated that the joint deposit could amount to $2.9 billion, or five times more than Visa and MasterCard's joint annual revenues in Russia, although Deputy Prime Minister Igor Shuvalov later said that the deposit could be "substantially reduced."
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