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Greece's sale of gaming stake is part of privatization
GREECE will sell almost all of its stake in gambling monopoly OPAP, the government said yesterday, raising the amount that is for sale in a bid to convince foreign lenders that it is serious about selling off state assets.
Athens, which owns 34 percent of one of Europe's biggest gaming companies, has launched a tender to sell a 33 percent stake in the company, the privatization agency HRADF said. Previously Greece had planned to sell 29 percent of OPAP, currently worth about 450 million euros (US$579 million) on the Athens bourse.
OPAP is central to Greece's plan to raise 19 billion euros from privatizations by 2015 - a key condition of its 130-billion euro bailout agreed earlier this year. It is the country's most profitable state firm with a sports betting monopoly stretching, for some games, as far as 2030.
Greece is badly behind on privatization targets and the three-month-old, conservative-led government has pledged to do better as it struggles to convince the European Union and the International Monetary Fund to resume the bailout payments that keep the country afloat.
"The fact that OPAP is being completely sold off shows the government's will to privatize," said Dimitris Mardas, an economics professor at Thessaloniki's Aristotle University.
HRADF set an October 19 deadline for expressions of interest and said the tender would be carried out in two phases. After an initial declaration of interest, bidders will be called to submit binding offers, HRADF said. It has the right to introduce an intermediary phase of non-binding bids in order to evaluate bidders' business plans.
"The complete privatization of OPAP will be carried out transparently, rapidly and with efficiency," HRADF's chief executive Yiannis Emiris said in the statement.
A senior government official said earlier this month that Athens aimed to find a buyer for OPAP by January and that four consortia of Greek and foreign firms were keen in the company.
Turkish conglomerate Dogan Holding said on Monday it would consider taking part in a sale tender for OPAP. Investment funds Fidelity and Silchester Inv already hold 5 percent each in the company.
Greece has picked Deutsche Bank and National Bank of Greece as financial advisers, it added.
Athens has already moved to clear issues that might block the company's sale. Earlier this month, it settled a row with EU competition authorities over how the company should be taxed and set a new 30 percent levy on gross earnings from next year.
But investors' appetites might be dampened by an ongoing court challenge against the Greek company's monopoly brought by Britain's biggest bookmaker William Hill and online gaming companies SportingBet and StanleyBet after they were denied gambling licenses in the country.
Athens, which owns 34 percent of one of Europe's biggest gaming companies, has launched a tender to sell a 33 percent stake in the company, the privatization agency HRADF said. Previously Greece had planned to sell 29 percent of OPAP, currently worth about 450 million euros (US$579 million) on the Athens bourse.
OPAP is central to Greece's plan to raise 19 billion euros from privatizations by 2015 - a key condition of its 130-billion euro bailout agreed earlier this year. It is the country's most profitable state firm with a sports betting monopoly stretching, for some games, as far as 2030.
Greece is badly behind on privatization targets and the three-month-old, conservative-led government has pledged to do better as it struggles to convince the European Union and the International Monetary Fund to resume the bailout payments that keep the country afloat.
"The fact that OPAP is being completely sold off shows the government's will to privatize," said Dimitris Mardas, an economics professor at Thessaloniki's Aristotle University.
HRADF set an October 19 deadline for expressions of interest and said the tender would be carried out in two phases. After an initial declaration of interest, bidders will be called to submit binding offers, HRADF said. It has the right to introduce an intermediary phase of non-binding bids in order to evaluate bidders' business plans.
"The complete privatization of OPAP will be carried out transparently, rapidly and with efficiency," HRADF's chief executive Yiannis Emiris said in the statement.
A senior government official said earlier this month that Athens aimed to find a buyer for OPAP by January and that four consortia of Greek and foreign firms were keen in the company.
Turkish conglomerate Dogan Holding said on Monday it would consider taking part in a sale tender for OPAP. Investment funds Fidelity and Silchester Inv already hold 5 percent each in the company.
Greece has picked Deutsche Bank and National Bank of Greece as financial advisers, it added.
Athens has already moved to clear issues that might block the company's sale. Earlier this month, it settled a row with EU competition authorities over how the company should be taxed and set a new 30 percent levy on gross earnings from next year.
But investors' appetites might be dampened by an ongoing court challenge against the Greek company's monopoly brought by Britain's biggest bookmaker William Hill and online gaming companies SportingBet and StanleyBet after they were denied gambling licenses in the country.
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