
Oleg Varum
Founder
In October 2013, Oleg Varum signed papers to buy back the winery he'd sold six years earlier for $50 million. The price: $15 million. Most entrepreneurs would call that failure. Varum called it 'not being newcomers to winemaking'—and bet everything that he understood his creation's value better than the market did.
Transformation Arc
In October 2013, Oleg Varum (Олег Варум) signed papers to buy back the winery he’d sold six years earlier. The price: $15 million. He’d sold it for $50 million. Most entrepreneurs would call that failure. Oleg called it “not being newcomers to winemaking.”
We are not newcomers to winemaking and will do everything possible for the enterprise to flourish.
The Media-Shy Founder #
Oleg has given essentially no interviews in thirty years. The Krasnodar businessman lets the winery speak instead. What exists in the public record comes from transaction announcements, secondhand quotes, and corporate filings. His pre-wine biography remains unknown—no documented education, no prior career history, no origin story explaining how he entered the wine industry.
What is documented: he is the cousin (двоюродный брат) of pop singer Anzhelika Varum, not her father or brother as sometimes misreported. The family connection brought marketing value—an “AV” wine line carries the singer’s initials—but the business story belongs to Oleg.
This biographical mystery makes Oleg unusual among founder profiles. Most entrepreneurs build personal brands alongside company brands. Varum built only the company.
The First Building: 2001-2007 #
The Millstream story becomes visible in 2001 when Oleg’s investment group formed Millstream Holding and took control of the Soviet-era “Mirny” winery on the Taman Peninsula. The enterprise traced its origins to 1936, but decades of neglect had left infrastructure aging and operations struggling.
His group adopted the English name “Millstream”—unusual for a Russian winery—and began major modernization. By 2007, he had transformed the operation into a top-10 Russian wine producer with modern equipment and improved quality metrics.
Then he sold it.
The Strategic Exit #
In 2007, Bank of Moscow was expanding its alcohol portfolio aggressively. Oleg sold Millstream for approximately $50 million—a price industry analysts called “inflated,” suggesting strong negotiating on the founder’s part.
The timing looked prescient. Sell at market peak. Take profit. Move on.
The Watching Years #
What happened next was not part of any plan.
By 2011, Bank of Moscow’s president Andrei Borodin had fled to London amid a billion-dollar embezzlement investigation. The bank’s assets—including Millstream—became orphaned under distracted ownership focused on legal survival rather than business operations.
Oleg watched from outside as his creation hemorrhaged. Annual losses exceeded 115 million rubles. Debt accumulated to 822.9 million rubles. No strategic direction. No investment. No leadership.
This is the chapter that doesn’t appear in entrepreneurship textbooks: the psychological weight of watching something you built deteriorate under someone else’s management. Oleg had cashed out successfully. He could have stayed cashed out. Many founders do.
The Question Every Founder Dreads #
By 2013, Oleg faced a choice. Bank of Moscow needed to liquidate assets. Millstream was available at distressed pricing. But buying it back meant betting that his understanding of the business—developed over six years of building, then six years of watching—was more accurate than the market’s assessment.
Most entrepreneurs in Oleg’s position would hesitate. The 2007 sale looked like victory. A 2013 buyback might look like inability to let go. Was this conviction or delusion? The founder’s nightmare question.
Oleg’s Rosglávino—already using Millstream as a bottling partner—made the bet. In October 2013, his group re-acquired the entire operation for approximately 500 million rubles ($15 million), covering 60% of the outstanding debt while gaining full control.
The purchase price: 70% below what he’d sold it for six years earlier.
“We are not newcomers to winemaking,” Oleg said, “and will do everything possible for the enterprise to flourish.”
Building What He Never Had Time to Create #
The post-buyback Millstream differed fundamentally from the pre-sale version. Oleg had learned something during those six years away: production excellence wasn’t enough. Distribution infrastructure created sustainable competitive advantage.
Rather than repeat the operator model that led to exhaustion and sale in 2007, Oleg installed professional management. Marina Borkova became CEO in February 2015. The founder stepped back from daily operations.
Then came the retail strategy. From 2015-2016, the first branded Millstream stores opened. By 2018, the network reached 120 locations. By 2025, it exceeded 400—spanning from Krasnodar to Siberia.
This was what Oleg couldn’t build the first time. Running a production-focused winery consumed all available attention. Only after selling, watching, and buying back—with professional management handling operations—could he focus on the distribution infrastructure that would differentiate Millstream from every competitor.
The Second Crisis: 2022-2024 #
Building 400 stores tested conviction again. The 2022-2024 period brought margin pressure that compressed profitability to zero.
As Oleg reportedly told a friend in 2022: “The task is simply to survive.”
This was the second “Am I delusional?” moment. The buyback had worked—but had he overextended on retail expansion? Were 400 stores evidence of ambition or hubris?
The answer came in the numbers. 2024 revenue reached 883 million rubles—14% above 2023. The retail network provided cash flow stability that wholesale-dependent competitors lacked. Working at zero margins was painful but sustainable because direct-to-consumer channels captured margin that distributors would otherwise take.
The Exit from Re-Entry #
In July 2024, Oleg relocated to Israel, stepping back from active Russian operations while retaining 24.5% ownership. Majority control (51%) rests with Elena Buividis—a figure with no public profile whose relationship to the founder remains undocumented.
Professional management under Borkova continues executing the retail expansion strategy. The 400+ store network operates independently of founder involvement.
This is what few founders manage: a successful exit from their own re-entry. Build, sell, watch, buy back, professionalize, step back. The founder’s journey completed not with a triumphant return to the helm, but with the wisdom to know when the company no longer needed its founder at the controls.
The Lesson: Timing and Conviction #
Oleg’s pattern challenges the founder-as-hero narrative. He didn’t overcome obstacles through perseverance alone. He timed his exit in 2007 to capture peak value. He timed his re-entry in 2013 to capture distressed opportunity. He timed his professionalization in 2015 to enable scaling without founder burnout. He timed his departure in 2024 to preserve ownership while reducing operational involvement.
The 70% discount buyback wasn’t failure reversed—it was sophisticated capital allocation by someone who understood an asset’s value better than distressed sellers could.
For founders facing similar crossroads, Oleg’s story suggests questions worth asking: Do I understand this business well enough to buy it back at any price? What could I build with a second chance that I couldn’t build the first time? And when the company no longer needs me, will I recognize that moment?
The media-shy Krasnodar businessman never answered these questions publicly. But 400+ stores across Russia provide an answer that interviews never could.
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