Nikolay Storonsky, the 38-year-old co-founder and chief executive officer of London-based fintech startup Revolut Ltd., has renounced Russian citizenship amid his outspoken opposition to the war in Ukraine.
(Bloomberg) — Nikolay Storonsky, the 38-year-old co-founder and chief executive officer of London-based fintech startup Revolut Ltd., has renounced Russian citizenship amid his outspoken opposition to the war in Ukraine.
“Nik is a British citizen.
Earlier this year he renounced his citizenship by birth to Russia. His position on the war is on the public record: the war is totally abhorrent and he remains resolute in calling for an immediate end to the fighting,” a spokesman for Revolut said.
Storonsky’s move came before his father, an executive at a unit of Russia’s Gazprom, was sanctioned by Ukraine earlier this month, the spokesman said.
The news was first reported by the Telegraph.
A former derivatives trader at Credit Suisse Group AG and Lehman Brothers, Storonsky and several partners launched Revolut in 2015. He’s worth $6.7 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.
–With assistance from Volodymyr Verbyany and Ivan Levingston.
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