Thursday, August 22, 2013

Greek PM meets billionaire Saudi prince......

Greek PM meets billionaire Saudi prince to discuss investments

  • Dislike
Reuters 
Greek PM Samaras smiles during an Economist conference in Athens
.
View gallery
Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras smiles during the Economist Conference on "Overcoming Stagnation: …
ATHENS (Reuters) - Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras met Saudi billionaire Prince Alwaleed bin Talal on Thursday to discuss investment opportunities, government officials said, as Athens pushes for foreign investment for its depressed economy.
"It was a customary visit, there is interest in investing in Greece," said a government official who declined to be named.
The prince, ranked 26th on the Forbes global ranking of billionaires, owns large stakes in Citigroup, and Apple Inc. among other companies.
A nephew of Saudi King Abdullah, bin Talal is also the owner or part-owner of luxury hotels including the Plaza in New York, the Savoy in London and the George V in Paris.
Greece is looking to attract investors into its asset sales program, which includes its gas company DEPA, utility Public Power Corp., the Athens international airport, refiner Hellenic Petroleum and its two main ports to help chop its debt load.
Past speculation that funds would flow in from wealthy Middle East and Asian investors have so far failed to materialize, apart from Qatar Holdings' investment in a gold mining project and Chinese port operator Cosco's investment in Piraeus Port.
Athens is also looking for buyers for a strategic stake in fourth-largest lender Eurobank and real estate investors to develop the site of the old Athens airport Hellenikon.
Alwaleed's investment vehicle, Kingdom Holding, is seeking out new targets to diversify its global portfolio and has asked investment banks to identify possible acquisition targets around the world.
In November last year Samaras visited the wealthy Gulf state of Qatar and met top officials from its sovereign wealth fund to discuss investment opportunities to help the struggling economy.
(Reporting by Lefteris Papadimas and George Georgiopoulos; editing by Stephen Nisbet)             yahoonews

No comments:

Post a Comment