5 Russia Stocks to Consider Buying

For U.S. investors, Russia has never had the reputation of a "safe" place to invest. Headlines covering hacked bank accounts and DNC servers haven't made investors any more eager to invest in the Russian Federation.

Yet the negative media portrayal may mask viable investment opportunities in the country. Here are five of the best Russian stocks you might want to consider buying: Veon Ltd. (NASDAQ: VEON), Mobile TeleSystems (NYSE: MBT), Mechel PAO (NYSE: MTL), Yandex (NASDAQ: YNDX), and Qiwi plc (NASDAQ: QIWI).

Company

Market Capitalization

P/E

5-Year Growth Rate (Projected)

Dividend Yield

Veon Ltd.

$6.6 billion

4.7

62%*

6.1%

Mobile TeleSystems

$9.7 billion

9.8

6%

9%

Mechel PAO

$860 million

3.9

**

none

Yandex

$10.2 billion

92.3

24%

none

Qiwi

$914 million

21.2

12%

5.1%

Data source: S&P Global Market Intelligence.
* I'd take this one with a grain of salt. Veon is expected to lose money by the end of this year, and earn just one-third of what it earned in 2016, in 2018.
** No five-year projection is available, but earnings are expected to decline over the next two years.

Map of Russia with tricolor flag coloring
Map of Russia with tricolor flag coloring

Russia is more than just gold and oil. It's got tech stocks, too -- and maybe one worth buying. Image source: Getty Images.

Russian stocks for sale

According to data from S&P Global, all of these five Russian companies do the majority of their business in Russia. That's notwithstanding the fact that Veon (known as Vimpel-Communications until February 2017) moved its headquarters to Amsterdam in 2010, and Qiwi set itself up in Cyprus way back in 2004.

Regardless of where they do business, all five of these stocks trade on the major NYSE or Nasdaq U.S. stock exchanges. While it's possible to buy stock in other well-known Russian businesses -- Gazprom, Lukoil, Norilsk Nickel to name a few -- in the U.S., to do that you need to place orders on the over-the-counter (OTC) market. In doing so, you'll assume the risk of investing in a less liquid marketplace where it's harder to determine a fair price, and trading volumes may be sparse. Furthermore, you may find yourself investing "blind" as OTC-listed stocks don't have the same requirements for financial disclosure with the SEC as NYSE- and Nasdaq-listed stocks do.

The advantage of picking and choosing your Russian stocks from the above list, therefore, is that you avoid these pitfalls.

Russian stocks on sale

The other advantage, of course, is that, as you can see in the chart above, these Russian stocks are cheap. With the exception of "tech" firms Yandex and Qiwi, which went public on the Nasdaq in 2011 and 2013, respectively, these Russian equities all sell for single-digit multiples to trailing earnings -- prices so low you usually don't see them except among the most troubled companies here in the U.S.