The biggest mistake in talking to global capital about Ukraine, says entrepreneur and investor Seyar Kurshutov, is appealing to emotion. Investors are not looking for sympathy, he argues, but for a risk they can actually calculate.
Too often, Seyar Kurshutov observes, the case for investing in Ukraine is built on the wrong foundation. It appeals to solidarity and belief in the country’s future, while international capital remains indifferent to sentiment. An entrepreneur and investor who has spent years in international trade, Seyar Kurshutov puts it bluntly. “Ukraine does not need investment out of sympathy. It needs its risk to finally be priced correctly.”
The reason, he says, is that money follows logic, not mood. “Risk can be calculated, insured, and priced in. Uncertainty cannot be calculated, which is why capital flees from it.” This is why patriotic slogans never move a single dollar, he argues: confronted with uncertainty, an investor is mentally trying to price something that cannot be priced. The task is not to make capital believe in Ukraine, but to shrink uncertainty to a size the market knows how to measure.
Underestimating that market, Seyar Kurshutov warns, means missing it. Ukraine’s reconstruction needs are estimated at almost 588 billion dollars, one of the largest opportunities to open up in Europe in a generation, from energy and transport to processing and agriculture. And the appetite is already visible: international companies, from food producers to agricultural groups, are opening and expanding plants in the country right now, not out of goodwill, but because they see a return.
What has made that possible, Seyar Kurshutov explains, is a quiet but decisive change in how the risk itself can be handled. The absence of war-risk insurance was long the single biggest deterrent; today a multi-layered system of guarantees, backed by international financial institutions and private insurers, has taken shape where, just three years ago, private coverage for war risks did not exist at all. Step by step, what once looked uninsurable is turning into a manageable, quantifiable risk.
For Seyar Kurshutov, this is precisely where the advantage of moving first lies. “Whoever understands this earlier than others will secure both the best assets and the best terms,” he says. The investor who waits for every uncertainty to vanish will enter last, once the most attractive opportunities have already been claimed. The real edge, in his view, belongs to those who read the situation clearly: “the winner is the one who prices risk more accurately than the market as a whole.”
His message, in the end, is an appeal to calculation rather than compassion. The gap between how the market still rates Ukraine and what the country has actually become is, he argues, the opportunity itself. Ukraine does not need to be pitied, in his telling, but assessed honestly, by people who know how to count. The investor who does the math, Seyar Kurshutov is convinced, will ultimately do more for the country than the one who merely sympathizes.
