KEY POINTS
  • The Kremlin has found itself increasingly isolated in recent days, with the U.S. and Western allies imposing an extraordinary set of measures that have sent its currency plummeting.
  • For some businesses, cutting ties with Russia marks the end of more than three decades of investment there following the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.
  • The situation in Ukraine has prompted many to conclude that the financial and reputational risks of continuing operations in Russia are now too great.
Shell petrol station logo on Sept. 29, 2021 in Birmingham, United Kingdom.

Russia's invasion of Ukraine has prompted a fast-growing list of companies to shun Moscow, with firms scrambling to cut ties as foreign governments ratchet up punitive economic sanctions.

Russia attacked Ukraine on several fronts on Tuesday, the sixth day of the war, with a 40-mile convoy of tanks and other vehicles seen threatening the capital city of Kyiv. President Vladimir Putin's troops continue to run into stiff Ukrainian resistance, however.