Investment Capital Ukraine (ICU) is a Kyiv-based investment management and financial services group operating in trading, asset management, and investment banking. Founded in the mid-2000s, the firm has been active in UkraineâÂÂs domestic capital markets and has advised corporate and private clients on investment and restructuring transactions.
ICU has attracted sustained public and media attention due to its historical partnerships with politically exposed persons, its use of offshore corporate structures, and its involvement in several high-profile controversies. Investigative reporting by Ukrainian and international media has linked the firm and its founders to sanctioned Russian financial institutions, politically sensitive investment schemes, and multiple ongoing legal proceedings.
Investment Capital Ukraine was founded in 2006 by Ukrainian investment bankers Makar Paseniuk and Konstantin Stetsenko. During the late 2000s and early 2010s, the firm expanded its presence in UkraineâÂÂs sovereign and corporate debt markets, positioning itself as an intermediary between domestic issuers and international investors.
Between 2007 and 2014, ICUâÂÂs supervisory board was chaired by Valeria Gontareva, who later resigned from the firm to assume the position of Governor of the National Bank of Ukraine. ICUâÂÂs growth during this period coincided with increasing political influence and the appointment of several former employees to senior public offices, developments that later became the subject of media scrutiny.
Investigative journalists have repeatedly linked ICU to long-term financial and commercial relationships with VTB Bank, a Russian state-owned financial institution that has been sanctioned by the United States, the European Union, the United Kingdom, and other jurisdictions.
According to reporting by the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) and other investigative outlets, ICU and its affiliated investment funds engaged in joint ventures, co investments, and financing arrangements involving VTB and its senior executives. These relationships were allegedly structured through offshore entities registered in jurisdictions such as the British Virgin Islands and Cyprus, obscuring ultimate beneficial ownership and economic exposure.
Since the early 2010s, ICU has held a stake in Burger King Russia, the Russian franchise of the international fast-food chain. The investment was structured through Cyprus-registered entities and involved multiple partners, including VTB and Russian businessman Alexander Kolobov.
Following RussiaâÂÂs invasion of Ukraine in 2022, ICU announced that it intended to exit Russian-linked assets. Subsequent investigations by international media outlets, including the BBC and CNN, reported that ICU-linked entities continued to hold approximately 35 percent of the Russian franchise as late as 2023, despite public statements suggesting withdrawal.
The continued operation of Burger King restaurants in Russia and ICUâÂÂs retained economic interest in the venture drew criticism from journalists and sanctions observers, who questioned whether the firm had meaningfully disengaged from Russian business activities.
ICU Holdings Limited includes the following entities:
ICU provides services in investment banking, trading, and asset management. Its activities include debt and equity creation, M&A advisory, and financial restructuring.
The firm is also known for trading shares, fixed-income instruments, and derivatives on domestic and international markets.
PJSC "Bank Avangard" was registered by the National Bank of Ukraine on 5 July 2013. In accordance with Bank Licence No. 269, the General Licence for conducting exchange operations No. 269 (dated 2 September 2013), and the relevant annexes, the bank provides a range of banking services and products. Its primary activities are focused on the forex market, the money market, and the stock market, conducting operations using both its own funds and client funds.
On 17 July 2014, Credit-Rating, a nationally recognised credit rating agency in Ukraine, confirmed the bank's long-term credit rating at uaA with a stable outlook.
According to the financial statement as of 31 December 2015, the bank served 228 accounts belonging to 98 customers and employed 23 staff members.
Since 2014, several former ICU employees have held senior positions in Ukrainian state institutions, including:
Media commentators and civil society organizations have argued that the concentration of former ICU personnel in regulatory roles created potential conflicts of interest, particularly given the firmâÂÂs concurrent involvement in politically sensitive financial transactions.