The Saint Petersburg International Economic Forum has long been Russia’s answer to Davos: a gilded stage for Kremlin deal-making and a barometer of investor confidence. This year, the mood is decidedly less buoyant. A series of drone attacks on the city in the lead-up to the event have sent a chill through the corridors of the Expoforum convention centre, reminding attendees that war has a way of puncturing even the most carefully curated narratives.
For the finance set, the symbolism is hard to miss. St Petersburg is not just Russia’s cultural jewel; it is a key logistical hub and a symbol of the state’s claim to stability. Drones buzzing over the Neva represent a breach in the perimeter, a crack in the fortress. Markets abhor uncertainty, and the sight of UAVs evading air defences in Russia’s second city does little to inspire the capital inflows President Putin so desperately needs.
The economic forum was expected to showcase new investment pledges, particularly from Chinese and Middle Eastern partners. Yet the attacks underscore the stark reality: Russia’s war economy is consuming resources at an alarming rate. Defence spending now accounts for nearly one-third of the budget, crowding out productive investment. The rouble has been stable only thanks to capital controls and forced FX sales by exporters. Inflation is running hot, with the central bank forced to keep interest rates at a punitive 16%.
Meanwhile, the West’s sanctions regime continues to tighten. The latest measures target the very payment infrastructure that lubricates Russia’s trade with Asia. Capital flight is an unquantifiable but ever-present worry. Every drone strike, every pipeline explosion, every assassination attempt in Moscow erodes the already thin veneer of normalcy that the Kremlin tries to project.
For the delegates sipping champagne in the Mariinsky Palace, the question is whether these attacks are a one-off or the beginning of a more sustained campaign. The Ukrainians have signalled they intend to bring the war home. If St Petersburg becomes a regular target, the economic forum’s already diminished lustre will tarnish further. The bottom line is clear: no amount of flag-waving or ministerial platitudes can mask the fact that Russia’s fiscal position is deteriorating, its human capital is fleeing, and its access to global markets is severely constrained.
As a financial editor who has seen booms and busts from London to Singapore, I would advise any investor to treat the Kremlin’s economic projections with extreme skepticism. The yield on Russia’s sovereign Eurobonds tells a grim story of a credit in distress, even if the rouble-denominated market is kept afloat by fiat. The St Petersburg forum may produce headlines about big infrastructure deals, but the real action is in the balance of payments and the trajectory of defence spending. Until the war ends, capital will remain a scarce and nervous commodity in Moscow.











