MOSCOW – The 29-year-old founder of Russia's biggest
social network website VKontakte has sold his stake in the
company in a deal believed to be worth hundreds of millions
of dollars.
Pavel Durov confirmed late Friday on the website he started
that he had sold his 12 percent stake to Ivan Tavrin, chief
executive of mobile operator Megafon.
The deal effectively gives the control of the website to the
empire of Russia's richest man Alisher Usmanov, which owns
Megafon. Usmanov already owns 40 percent of VKontakte
through his Mail.Ru congolomerate.
The remaining 48 percent is owned by investment group
United Capital Partners.
According to Vedomosti newspaper, the deal was possibly
struck in December. It also quoted a source saying it could be
based on a valuation of the company of up to four billion
dollars.
Explaining the reason for the sale, Durov wrote: "What you
own sooner or later begins owning you."
"I tried to get rid of property over the last few years… To
reach the ideal I had to get rid of the biggest part of my
property, the 12 percent stake in VKontakte," he said.
"I am happy that not so long ago I reached this goal, having
sold my stake in VKontakte to my friend Ivan Tavrin," added
the 29-year-old, who is famous for eccentric actions like
throwing fistfuls of cash out of the window of the network's
headquarters in Saint Petersburg.
Hinting at the size of the deal, VKontakte spokesman Georgy
Labushkin wrote a few hours after news broke of the sale:
"Where shall we invest $420 million?"
Durov, who is sometimes compared to Facebook founder
Mark Zuckerberg, assured in his message that the ownership
changes "will not have any effect" on VKontakte and that he
will "continue to monitor the quality" of the network.
VKontakte is Russia's most popular social network, dwarfing
even Facebook's presence in the country with its 100 million
users.(AFP)
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