The Dow Jones service has stopped supplying Russian banks with sanctions data, while the volume of funds raised by IPOs in the U.S. and Europe in 2022 has fallen by 90% – these and other important news for Monday morning, June 6, in our daily review.

Russian banks have a problem with obtaining compliance information about their clients – Western suppliers of data on sanctions lists in force around the world are breaking contracts with them, RBC has found out. One of the largest such services – Risk & Compliance from Dow Jones – has sent notices to credit organizations on termination of cooperation, RBC writes with reference to sources in two banks that are not under Western sanctions.

The volume raised in initial public offerings (IPOs) on stock exchanges in the U.S. and Europe this year fell by 90%, globally – by 71%. About it writes the Financial Times with reference to the data of Dealogic. In the U.S. and Europe, 157 companies raised a total of $17.9 billion in the first five months of 2022. Over the same period in 2021, 628 companies went public and raised $192 billion, according to Dealogic data.

Oil production in Russia will decline due to the withdrawal of Western capital and technology from the country. This was stated by Michael Wirth, head of the American energy company Chevron, in an interview with The Wall Street Journal. He cited the experience of Iran and Venezuela, which had to reduce production due to sanctions.

The Central Bank will study the issue of using ATMs for video identification of new bank customers. With a proposal to test this technology in the “regulatory sandbox” to the Central Bank approached the company-supplier and manufacturer of ATMs BFS, writes RBC.

QIWI founder Sergey Solonin received 38% of the startup Station, which was created by Skolkovo Ventures and Dentsu Group to develop marketing technologies. However, the latter is leaving the Russian market, RBC writes.