SCM Holdings

SCM Holdings
Company typePrivate
IndustryHolding
Founded2000 (2000) in Donetsk
Headquarters,
Key people
Rinat Akhmetov (owner)
Oleg Popov (CEO)[1]
RevenueIncrease US$23.470 billion (2012)
Total assetsIncrease US$31 billion (2012)
OwnerRinat Akhmetov (100%)
Number of employees
300,000
SubsidiariesMetinvest
DTEK
ESTA Holding
Metinvest
DTEK
ESTA Holding
Ukrtelecom
umgi
PUMB
HarvEast
Lemtrans
Websitewww.scm.com.ua

System Capital Management (Ukrainian: Систем Кепітал Менеджмент) or SCM is a major Ukrainian financial and industrial holding company established in 2000 in Donetsk, Ukraine. It is currently headquartered in Kyiv.[2]

The company is Ukraine’s largest private-sector employer[3][4] and taxpayer.[5]

SCM’s portfolio includes more than 250 companies,[6] across over 30 countries, employing approximately 150,000 people.[7]

SCM’s portfolio businesses operate in energy, metals and mining, minerals, logistics, infrastructure, agriculture, telecommunications, real estate, finance and others.[8] SCM develops large scale industrial facilities, with active development projects in a number of countries, including Italy, Poland, Croatia, and Romania.[9]

Structure

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The biggest company in the SCM Group is Metinvest, involved in the mining and steel business.[10] It is one of Ukraine's largest private business and one of the biggest steel producers in Europe. It is also the largest Ukrainian producer of iron ore. In addition to Ukraine, Metinvest has assets in the US, Italy, UK, Bulgaria, and Switzerland.[11]

DTEK, involved in electricity generation (both from thermal and renewable sources), distribution and customer service. As of 2025, DTEK has invested $1.2 billion in renewable energy, and has committed €450 million to the expansion of its Tyligulska Wind Power Plant, which can power nearly one million homes in south-west Ukraine once live.[12]

Ukrtelecom, the national telecommunications operator of Ukraine. In 2024 alone, nearly 7,000 kilometres of fibre-optic cable were installed, enabling over 3 million households to access modern digital services even amid the full-scale Russian invasion.[13]

First Ukrainian International Bank (FUIB or PUMB/ПУМБ) is the largest privately owned bank in Ukraine.[14] It is recognized as a systemically important bank by the National Bank of Ukraine (NBU).[15] FUIB is also an authorized institution for safeguarding the NBU’s cash reserves.[16] The bank serves 147,000 corporate clients and more than 1.9 million retail customers, offering a comprehensive range of financial services. [17] According to the NBU, FUIB ranks among the top five banks in Ukraine by loan portfolio size, total assets, and client account balances.[18]

Lemtrans Group is the largest transport and logistics group in Ukraine,[19] providing freight transportation services by rail, road, and marine routes both within Ukraine and the European Union. The Group's companies operate a fleet of freight rolling stock and containers, car maintenance facilities and container terminals (agriculture, mining and other industries).

ESTA Holding, an established player in Ukraine’s commercial real estate sector, specialising in offices, shopping centres, and hotel properties.[20] Notable assets include the Leonardo Business Centre and five-star Opera Hotel in Kyiv. In 2016, after four years of reconstruction, ESTA Holding reopened Kyiv Central Mall (TSUM) on the capital’s main thoroughfare - Khreshchatyk.[21]

umgi, a private equity firm founded by SCM in 2006. umgi was established to develop industrial ventures both in Ukraine and internationally. umgi currently manages a portfolio of eight companies across Ukraine, Poland, Spain, Italy, Turkey, Romania, Serbia, [22] and India. [23] These assets operate in diverse sectors including the green economy, industrial goods and services, and mining. As of December 2024, the collective market value of businesses under umgi's management reached $500 million.[24]

HarvEast Holding is a diversified agribusiness overseeing a land bank of 123,000 hectares in Kyiv, Zhytomyr, and the Ukraine-controlled territory of Donetsk region. Сrop production is a priority area of activity of HarvEast. The main crops are winter and spring cereals (wheat, corn, barley), sunflower, rapeseed, and niche crops.[25]

SCM operations amid Russian military invasion

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On 22 February 2022, when hundreds of people took to the streets of Mariupol protesting against Russia's invasion into Ukraine, Akhmetov announced that the company was going to pay $34 million in taxes upfront to bolster Ukraine's treasury.[26]

Shortly after Russia invaded Ukraine, Akhmetov stated that the company's goal in war conditions was to help Ukrainians withstand the invasion: "My Foundation is helping Ukrainians survive by providing water, food, medicines, and any help we can give here and now. SCM businesses are helping the army and territorial defence forces defend our sovereignty, our freedom and independence, and win the war," he stated. Akhmetov stated that SCM was using its international connections and opportunities to communicate to their international partners that Ukrainians were dying and suffering because of Russia's aggression: "What is unfolding here is a war crime and a crime against humanity, against Ukraine and the Ukrainians. This can neither be explained nor justified."[27]

SCM itself and its businesses have been some of the largest corporate supporters of the Ukrainian population and military since the outbreak of the war. In 2022 alone, SCM companies paid UAH 73.2 billion in taxes (approximately US$2.7bn). SCM together with the Rinat Akhmetov Foundation have channeled over UAH 11.3 billion ($315 million) to help Ukraine. [28]

This included the following assistance:

  • Through Steel Front, distributed ammunition, vehicles, drones, thermal imagers, radios, armor, medical kits, fuel, and more to Ukrainian military units. For example, Steel Front has already provided over UAH 85 million in support to the 157th Brigade.[29]
  • Launched the "Heart of Azovstal" project, allocating UAH 1 billion (~$25 million) to support defenders of the city of Mariupol with housing, medical care, legal and social assistance.[30]
  • Launched the "Saving Lives" humanitarian mission, delivering food, hygiene kits and medicines to displaced civilians and frontline communities. In 2023, this project directed EUR 1.26 bn to projects on the ground, including delivering approximately 70,000 food kits.[31]
  • The football club "Shakhtar" also provides consistent humanitarian assistance, supporting Ukraine’s military, aiding displaced families, and supplying medical equipment to hospitals.[32]

In addition to support from SCM itself and Rinat Akhmetov, SCM portfolio companies have also been leaders in supporting Ukraine: Metinvest has been a major pillar of Ukraine’s defence and humanitarian aid, contributing over UAH 8.4 billion (≈ US $225 million) across military, social, and economic fronts.[33] The company provided free steel, armour plates, 150,000+ bulletproof vests, 25,000 helmets, and 679 mobile dugouts/command shelters. More than 8,000 employees serve in the military and are supplied with armour, winter gear, and mental‑health support. Metinvest is Ukraine’s top private donor, continuingly paying full taxes (UAH 19.8 billion in 2024), maintaining operations despite disrupted assets, and investing in post‑war reconstruction projects like "Steel Dream".

DTEK has committed over UAH 1 billion (~US $30–35 million) to military and humanitarian aid.[34] DTEK has provided free power—valued at ~UAH 350 million—to over 100 critical infrastructure facilities including hospitals, military facilities, bakeries, and water treatment plants in Kyiv, Donetsk, and Dnipropetrovsk regions. DTEK’s crews restored power to millions of homes across frontline areas, investing UAH 300 million in grid restoration and repairing war‑damaged power plants.

Ukrtelecom allocated around UAH 50 million to the military, delivering nearly 3,000 tactical first-aid kits, 4,000 tourniquets and 2,000 hemostatic bandages.[35] Ukrtelecom ensured access to communication services in about 90% of settlements that had been covered by its network before the full-scale invasion.[36] The company also equipped 503 school bomb shelters with Wi‑Fi and reconnected numerous medical and educational institutions. It continues to restore connectivity after frequent nationwide cyberattacks.[37]

Since the beginning of the full-scale invasion, the Lemtrans Group has allocated over UAH 43 million to support various projects. This assistance has included transfers to the special account of the National Bank of Ukraine, payment of logistics tariffs for the transportation of humanitarian aid, as well as the delivery of food to several regions across the country.[38]

First Ukrainian International Bank has contributed over UAH 916  million (~US $22 million+) through social projects and direct military aid. FUIB initiated a social project, "We are of the same blood," to support Ukrainian soldiers and civilians with blood supplies. This is a large-scale partnership project, which has 45 partners, including public organizations, illustrators, brands, shops, exhibition organizers, and even a football club. During its existence, the initiative "We Are of the Same Blood" raised more than 10 million UAH. The funds were used for 92 blood deliveries to hot spots; more than 6.7 thousand tactical medicine products; and 61 kits for emergency paramedics. Altogether, saved more than 160,000 lives. Approximately 3000 Ukrainians became donors, which means hope for recovery for 9,000 people.[39][40]

Since 2022, umgi has provided comprehensive military and humanitarian assistance totaling over UAH 36.7 million. Direct financial aid of UAH 16.8 million included the procurement and delivery of body armor, radios, thermal imagers, drones, generators, communication systems, anti-drone devices, and medical supplies for the Armed Forces.[41]

In-kind contributions worth UAH 19.9 million covered machinery, transport, fuel, building materials, and technical support. DTEK coordinated evacuations, supported fortification and road construction, supplied electricity and water to military units, and provided direct aid to mobilised employees. Many initiatives were implemented in partnership with international donors, notably the U.S.-based Unity for Ukraine Foundation.[42]

SCM's Metinvest and DTEK have joined efforts with the Rinat Akhmetov Foundation to launch the Saving Lives humanitarian project, which supplies food to IDPs as well as helps evacuate and accommodate people.[43]

Metinvest, UMG Investments, DTEK and other SCM businesses have joined efforts to create a national and international network of carriers to supply humanitarian aid during wartime, the Logistics Front. The objective of the logistics network is to help people as well as towns and cities affected by the Russian invasion deliver food and essentials and support critical infrastructure facilities. The company calls for carriers to join the network and become logistics partners.[44][45]

Assets affected as a result of Russian aggression

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Luhansk TPP was shelled on 22 February 2022, on the eve of the Russian invasion, during the escalation in certain areas of Donetsk Region and Luhansk Region (CADLR). It was the major source of heat and power in those regions. DTEK noted that restoration works could be carried out only in case of ceasefire.[46][47]

In his comments to The Wall Street Journal, Ahmetov, the owner of the two biggest Mariupol metallurgy plants, Azovstal Iron and Steel Works and Illich Steel and Iron Works, stated that both plants were under Ukrainian control but had been temporarily shut down. "Russian troops are turning Mariupol into rubble, killing Mariupol residents and bombing the plants," he said. "Under no circumstances will these plants operate under the Russian occupation."[48]

On 13 March 2022, Metinvest Group's Avdiivka Coke Plant came under heavy shelling. The shells damaged two coke shops and some other facilities of the plant. No one was injured.[49]

In February 2023, all of Akhmetov's assets in Russian occupied Donbas were confiscated.[50] The local Russian-installed authorities stated as a reason for the seizure that Akhmetov was a "rogue individual."[50]

During the Russian invasion, nearly 260 Ukrtelecom facilities were damaged, with around 50 of them completely destroyed. The most severe damage was suffered by network nodes in the Donetsk and Luhansk regions, as well as in Kharkiv, Zaporizhzhia, and Kherson.[51]

Losses in the temporarily occupied territories have been estimated at more than UAH 700 million. The total destructive impact of Russian aggression on Ukrtelecom amounts to UAH 2.8 billion, primarily due to the economic devaluation of operational assets.[52]

Due to the Russian invasion, HarvEast has lost control over approximately 150,000 hectares located within the Donetsk region. This conflict also resulted in the loss of two seed plants, five farms, a large volume of harvested crops and significant agricultural machinery.[53]

In 2017, umgi lost its dolomite mining operations (Private Joint Stock Company "Dokuchaevsky Flux-Dolomite Combinat" (PJSC "DFDC")) due to the occupation of parts of the Donetsk and Luhansk regions by Russian forces.[54]

In 2022, the company suffered another major loss following the full-scale Russian invasion - Private Joint Stock Company "Novotroitske Rudoupravlinnya" (PJSC "Novotroitske RU"), which specialised in limestone mining.[55]

Awards and recognition

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In September 2011, under USAID support, the Centre for Corporate Social Responsibility Development published the results of the first Ukraine's Companies' Transparency Index. The top ten list included three SCM Group companies: System Capital Management, Metinvest and DTEK, with DTEK as number one in the list.[56] SCM Group prepared the first corporate social responsibility report in Ukraine in 2005.[57]

On 1 December 2011, SCM was honored at the Business Leadership Roundtable and Corporate Social Responsibility Awards Luncheon held during Ukraine's 20th Anniversary of Independence Gala events in Washington, D.C.[58] On 15 December 2011, SCM took the first place at the National CSR Business Case 2011 Contest for its Contemporary Education social programme.[59][60]

At the beginning of 2012, Metinvest, DTEK and SCM took three first places at the ranking compiled by Gvardiya national ranking magazine[who?] as the most socially responsible businesses in Ukraine.[61]

Other Facts

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As of May 2022, SCM (dba SCM Consulting Ltd) was represented in the United States by the Washington, D.C. based public relations firm Qorvis LLC.[62]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Power structure SCM Holdings". SCM Holdings. 6 July 2023. Retrieved 26 August 2023.
  2. ^ SCM
  3. ^ Biggest private donor: Rinat Akhmetov allocates UAH 11.3 billion ($315 million, €270 million) to help Ukraine and its citizens during three years of the all-out war
  4. ^ Akhmetov's SCM pays UAH 73.2 bln in taxes to budget in 2022 – company
  5. ^ Названі найбільші платники податків України: Нафтогаз, Укрзалізниця, група "Приват"
  6. ^ [About SCM https://scm.com.ua/en/about]
  7. ^ Ukraine’s Richest Billionaire on SCM and War Efforts
  8. ^ How Ukraine's Largest Investment Holding is Making Sure Russia Pays For its Invasion
  9. ^ [About SCM https://scm.com.ua/en/about]
  10. ^ "History of Metinvest". Steelonthenet.com. Retrieved 28 October 2012.
  11. ^ "SCM - Our business - Locations". Scmholding.com. Archived from the original on 4 November 2016. Retrieved 3 November 2016.
  12. ^ Tyligulska
  13. ^ In 2024, Ukrtelecom laid almost 7,000 km of optical cable for 3 million households
  14. ^ FUIB
  15. ^ NBU revises list of systemically important banks
  16. ^ FUIB to store NBU’s cash reserves
  17. ^ Банк ПУМБ став офіційним партнером RAU Expo 2025
  18. ^ ПУМБ завершив перше півріччя 2025 року з прибутком 3,57 млрд грн
  19. ^ The largest private railway freight operator in Ukraine plans to build a modern container terminal in Fastiv
  20. ^ Еста Холдинг
  21. ^ Esta holding investments in TsUM shopping mall in Kyiv exceed USD 100mln
  22. ^ IN 2024, UMGI PORTFOLIO COMPANIES INCREASED THEIR GROSS REVENUE
  23. ^ Інвесткомпанія umgi у 2022-2023 рр. вклала в розвиток бізнесів групи СКМ майже $22 млн, відкрила завод у Туреччині
  24. ^ Businesses of SCM Group's investment company Umgi boost revenue by 50% in 2024
  25. ^ HarvEast Holding
  26. ^ "Richest Ukrainians With Billions To Lose Close Ranks As Putin Unleashes War". Forbes. Archived from the original on 22 April 2022.
  27. ^ Kroll, Luisa. "Ukraine's Richest Man Says He's Doing Everything He Can To Help His Country, And Sparing No Expense". Forbes. Retrieved 15 January 2024.
  28. ^ Ахметов спрямував вже 11.3 млрд на підтримку ЗСУ
  29. ^ Левченко став власником квартири
  30. ^ Про "Серце Азовсталі"
  31. ^ Рятуючи життя
  32. ^ The football club "Shakhtar" also provides consistent humanitarian assistance, supporting Ukraine’s military, aiding displaced families, and supplying medical equipment to hospitals
  33. ^ Metinvest Allocated 8.4 Bln UAH to Support Ukraine
  34. ^ 28 тисяч працівників ДТЕК стали донорами для ЗСУ
  35. ^ [1]
  36. ^ [2]
  37. ^ Ukrainian telco suffers a "powerful cyberattack"
  38. ^ Lemtrans summed up the preliminary results of the company’s work in 2023
  39. ^ FUIB’s investments in sustainable development reached UAH 341 million in 2024
  40. ^ Clothing That Saves Lives: DonorUA and FUIB Present the "We Are Of The Same Blood" Project at the Paris Olympics
  41. ^ Army receives three more Valkyrie stealth drones from Akhmetov's Steel Front
  42. ^ Army receives three more Valkyrie stealth drones from Akhmetov's Steel Front
  43. ^ Dsouza, Martin. "Everyone focused on one thing. How businessmen from the Forbes list help the army". Global Happenings. Retrieved 15 January 2024.
  44. ^ "В Украине заработал Логистический фронт". korrespondent.net (in Russian). Retrieved 15 January 2024.
  45. ^ "В Україні з'явився "Логістичний фронт"". Гордон | Gordon (in Ukrainian). Retrieved 15 January 2024.
  46. ^ "Луганскую ТЭС снова отключили из-за обстрелов". Экономическая правда (in Russian). Retrieved 15 January 2024.
  47. ^ Pahulych, Roman (22 February 2022). "Power Station In Flames Amid Intensive Shelling Near Separatist Areas In Ukraine". Radio Free Europe | Radio Liberty. Retrieved 14 January 2024.
  48. ^ "Ukrainians Flee Mariupol as Russian Forces Push to Take Port City". The Wall Street Journal. Archived from the original on 29 May 2023.
  49. ^ "Ukraine's largest steel firm says shells hit Avdiivka coke plant". Reuters. 13 March 2022. Retrieved 14 January 2024.
  50. ^ a b "Ukrainian businessman Rinat Akhmetov no longer has assets in Donbass, DPR head says". TASS. 10 February 2023. Retrieved 24 February 2023.
  51. ^ Ukrtelecom reported on the results of work in the military year 2023
  52. ^ Ukrtelecom cuts income by 14% to UAH 2.5 billion in H1, 2023
  53. ^ HarvEast launched 5 irrigation machines in the Kiev region
  54. ^ DOKUCHAYEVSK FLUX AND DOLOMITE PLANT TO BE TEMPORARILY CLOSED
  55. ^ CHANGES IN THE MANAGEMENT OF PRJSC "DOKUCHAYEVSK FLUX AND DOLOMITE PLANT" AND PRJSC "NOVOTROITSKOYE ORE MINING"
  56. ^ "Результати індексу прозорості". Archived from the original on 2 January 2012. Retrieved 8 February 2012.
  57. ^ "Kyiv Post. Independence. Community. Trust - Business - Business Sense - Business Sense: Companies catching on to corporate responsibility". Archived from the original on 5 February 2011. Retrieved 8 February 2012.
  58. ^ "Seven Companies in Ukraine Receive Awards for Corporate Social Responsibility Work". Archived from the original on 4 March 2012. Retrieved 8 February 2012.
  59. ^ ""Ашан" и СКМ выиграли в конкурсе социально-ответственных практик - КСО: деловой новостной сайт Дело Украина". Delo.ua. 19 December 2011. Retrieved 3 November 2016.
  60. ^ "Социальные проекты СКМ признаны лучшими в Украине | УНИАН". Economics.unian.net. 16 December 2011. Retrieved 3 November 2016.
  61. ^ "Контракты онлайн". Companies.kontrakty.ua. 1 January 2016. Archived from the original on 30 March 2012. Retrieved 3 November 2016.
  62. ^ United States Dept of Justice. Registration Statement Pursuant to the Foreign Agents Registration Act. 22 May 2022. Original: https://efile.fara.gov/docs/5483-Exhibit-AB-20220519-84.pdf Archived: https://web.archive.org/web/*/https://efile.fara.gov/docs/5483-Exhibit-AB-20220519-84.pdf
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