Athens News Agency: News in English (AM), 98-06-02
NEWS IN ENGLISH
Athens, Greece, 02/06/1998 (ANA)
MAIN HEADLINES
- Government urges Ionian Bank employees to come to talks
- Commercial Bank of Greece owns 58 percent of Ionian Bank
- New Athens bourse chairman calls for swift restructuring
- Greek stocks slump in wake of international doldrums
- National Bank of Greece says new share allocation to hold steady
- Debate at Posidonia on intelligent transport systems in shipping
- Greek protest to British Foreign Office
- US magazine criticises Turkey
- Expert signals concern over Kozloduy
- ND deputy's car crashes, one woman dead
- Crete increases share of GNP
- Increased profits for investment firms in '97
- 'Posidonia 98' opens in Piraeus
- Quarterly OTE profits, turnover rise
- Greek participation at Verona exhibition
- Athens Hospital doctors to strike tomorrow
- Weather
- Foreign exchange
NEWS IN DETAIL
Government urges Ionian Bank employees to come to talks
National Economy and Finance Minister Yiannos Papantoniou yesterday urged
striking Ionian Bank employees and union federation leaders to hold talks
on safeguarding jobs after the bank's sale.
Mr. Papantoniou made the statement after an informal meeting of the inner
cabinet held with the ruling PASOK party's political secretariat to discuss
the government's restructuring programme and the sale of Ionian Bank.
The talks would involve officials of Ionian's staff association, the
Federation of Greek Bank Employees' Unions, and the General Confederation
of Greek Labour.
Mr. Papantoniou said that the meeting restated the government's decision to
sell a majority stake in the bank and that terms of the sale would be
submitted for approval to the board of Commercial Bank of Greece, Ionian's
main shareholder, on June 19.
Government spokesman Dimitris Reppas also urged workers and bank union
representatives to hold talks with the government on safeguarding
jobs.
Commercial Bank of Greece owns 58 percent of Ionian Bank
Commercial Bank of Greece sold around one million shares of its stake in
Ionian Bank through the Athens bourse between March 26 and the date the
government announced its plan to sell the subsidiary, Commercial's chairman
Costas Georgoutsakos said yesterday. The bank made a substantial profit
from the sale, which brought its shareholding down to 58 percent, Mr.
Georgoutsakos told the Imerisia financial daily.
Both Commercial Bank and the government have repeatedly denied allegations
that they had dumped blocks of shares through the bourse in order to ease
Ionian's sale by driving down its share price.
Commenting on a proposed merger between Ionian Bank and Commercial Bank
contained in a recommendation by Monitor international consultants, Mr.
Georgoutsakos said the plan was rejected as it would have led to 3,100 lay-
offs and a sharp reduction in the group's branch network by 153.
The chairman said that Ionian Bank's sale would pave the way for a large
share capital increase in Commercial Bank to finance a restructuring plan
and an expansion programme.
New Athens bourse chairman calls for swift restructuring
The new chairman of the Athens Stock Exchange, Spyros Kouniakis, yesterday
urged the government to speed up its economic restructuring programme, in
which the bourse could play a major role.
Mr. Kouniakis also said he backed mergers and acquisitions by listed
companies.
He was speaking at a ceremony at which he formally took over chairmanship
of the Athens bourse from his predecessor, Manolis Xanthakis.
He said that the Athens bourse had invested more than 10 billion drachmas,
increased turnover by 30 times and boosted its capitalisation sixfold.
Greek stocks slump in wake of international doldrums
Greek equities lost substantial ground on the Athens Stock Exchange
yesterday hit by a decline at the opening of most European markets and a
negative climate in Asian markets.
The general index closed 2.12 percent lower at 2,536.09 points reversing an
early advance with most sector indices suffering losses. Banks dropped 3.07
percent, Insurance fell 2.33 percent, Investment eased 0.77 percent,
Leasing ended 4.41 percent off , Industrials fell 1.35 percent, Miscellaneous
eased 0.64 percent, but Construction and Holding rose 0.70 and 0.55 percent
respectively.
The parallel market index for small cap companies fell 0.84 percent. The
FTSE/ASE 20 index dropped 2.68 percent to 1,512.94.
Trading was active with turnover at 76.9 billion drachmas.
Broadly, decliners led advancers by 134 to 122 with another 16 issues
unchanged. Bank of Greece, Intracom, Nikas, Zampa, Korasidis, Kalpinis,
Alco Hellas, Viokarpet and Levenderis scored the biggest percentage gains
hitting the day's 8.0 percent limit up.
Pouliadis, Riopesca, Selonda, Dane, Intertyp, Nematemporiki, NEL, Vis and
Lavipharm suffered the heaviest losses.
National Bank of Greece ended at 41,950 drachmas, Ergobank at 27,000, Alpha
Credit Bank at 30,800, Delta Dairy at 4,600, Titan Cement at 19,100,
Intracom at 23,619 and Hellenic Telecommunications Organisation at 8,
650.
National Bank of Greece says new share allocation to hold steady
The ownership of National Bank of Greece has shifted to the private sector
following the sale of 2.5 million shares in the country's largest
commercial bank, the Sunday Kathimerini newspaper said at the weekend.
The shares, which were sold recently to domestic and foreign institutional
investors, came from the first phase of conversion of a bond forged with
the Greek state.
"Changes in shareholding percentages in the bank's share capital do not
upset existing balances and the current situation, and neither are they
expected to do so," National Bank of Greece said in a statement yesterday.
The sale lowered the state's shareholding in National Bank to a minority
shareholding of 42 percent, of which one percent is owned directly by the
state and the remainder by the broader public sector, Kathimerini
said.
Debate at Posidonia on intelligent transport systems in shipping
Experts from 11 countries representing projects supported by the European
Commission (DGXIII) meet in Piraeus today to discuss the latest developments
in intelligent transport systems, new added value services and information
society technologies for maritime transport.
The one-day conference on maritime and intermodal transport in the age of
transport telematics (Marinter '98) organised by the European Commission is
being held at the Piraeus Port Authority's waterfront exhibition centre in
parallel with Posidonia '98 , an international shipping exhibition running
from June 1-5.
During the Marinter '98 conference, delegates will discuss telematics
applications for effective and safe waterborne transport and their key role
in integrating and enhancing total transport services.
"Helping freight carriers to use a combination of maritime as well as rail
and road freight transport is the most significant step we can make in
taking advantage of Europe's biggest trading asset, Fotis Karamitsos,Head
of Telematics Applications for Transport and Environment at the European
Commission Directorate-General XIII, said in a statement.
Greek protest to British Foreign Office
Greece's ambassador in London, Vassilis Zafeiropoulos, lodged a protest
with the Foreign Office over the "Sunday Times" article. Mr. Zafeiropoulos
stressed to Foreign Office officials that such articles created serious
negative repercussions for the tourism of both Greece and Cyprus and should
not be used as a means of exerting pressure to secure the cancellation of
the missiles' installation.
The Foreign Office categorically assured the envoy that there had been no
British government influence or involvement in the newspaper article and
informed him that there was no special plan for the confronting of a crisis
in Cyprus. Speaking to the ANA, British defence ministry and foreign office
representatives questioned the credibility of the reporter who wrote the
article.
A Foreign Office representative was quoted as saying that the article had
also damaged British foreign policy.
US magazine criticises Turkey
An article in the American magazine "Defence News" criticised Turkey for
what it called that country's unwillingness to accept conditions for
"release of a European Union financial protocol in return for renewed talks
with Greece."
The article called Turkey's refusal a missed opportunity, noting that
Ankara did not take advantage of a British presidency proposal aimed at
bypassing Athens' veto.
According to the magazine, Turkey's refusal is expected to distance it from
its western European neighbours, adding that Ankara missed an opportunity
since after Britain, Austria will take over the EU presidency - a country
that many in Turkey consider hostile to them, or so the magazine says.
Expert signals concern over Kozloduy
Professor Costas Papastephanou, who lectures in nuclear physics at
Thessaloniki University, said yesterday that four of the six reactors at
the Kozloduy nuclear power plant in neighbouring Bulgaria should already
have been closed down because of their obsolete technology.
Commenting however on reports of a recent minor nuclear accident at
Kozloduy, Mr. Papastephanou said "it can't have been very serious", adding
that "if something did happen, it must have been dealt with promptly".
Describing all six reactors at Kozloduy as obsolete, Mr. Papastephanou said
Bulgaria would not close the four most dangerous ones until the construction
of two bigger reactors has been completed in 2004 and 2007.
"Under no circumstances will Bulgaria stop using nuclear energy, because it
wants to use it as a negotiating card in its bid to join the European Union,
" he told a press conference on the environment organised by local
officials of the main opposition N ew Democracy party in Thessaloniki.
Greece, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and the environmental
organisation Greenpeace have repeatedly underlined the danger posed by the
operation of the Kozloduy plant, situated just 225 kilometres from the
Greek-Bulgarian border.
Greenpeace has warned that an accident at Kozloduy could overshadow the
terrible consequences of the Chernobyl disaster which caused 30,000 deaths
and contaminated 160,000 square kilometres of land, forcing 400,000 people
to abandon their homes.
ND deputy's car crashes, one woman dead
A young woman died early yesterday when a vehicle in which she was riding
in, driven by main opposition New Democracy deputy Costas Karaminas,
slammed into three parked cars and finally crashed into an electricity
pole.
Mr. Karaminas and a friend who was also in the car, Artemis Panousos, 32, a
merchant, ND cadre and chairman of the municipal council of Karlovasi on
the island of Samos, were not seriously injured. Police later said that
both men were wearing seat belts , while their air-bags were also activated
on impact.
Citing his Parliamentary immunity, authorities said Mr. Karaminas refused
to take a breathalyser test, while initial police reports state that the
accident was due to excessive speed. Later in the day the Samos deputy said
he didn't remember whether he refused to take a breathalyser, adding
however, that he will not "dispute reports by police from the accident
division dispatched to the incident."
The dead woman was identified as 26-year-old Elli Pilidou.
Crete increases share of GNP
Crete accounted for 5.3 per cent of Greece's GNP in the 1990-95 period -
compared to 4.5 per cent in the previous decade - while its 10-year annual
average unemployment rate stands at 4 per cent, half the national average,
participants at a one-day confer ence in Hania were told yesterday.
Crete's development rates are considerably influenced by tourism and the
cultivation of olives, it was also reported.
Finance Undersecretary Nikos Christodoulakis, who spoke at the conference,
said Crete's regional development plan would greatly contribute to the
formulation of a national development plan.
Increased profits for investment firms in '97
Profits of investment firms amounted to 40.9 billion drachmas in 1997,
increasing by 133 per cent compared to 1996.
Over the same period of time, revenues for the entire sector increased by
115 per cent.
Results of investment firms in 1998, according to a publication by the
Union of Institutional Investors (ETHE), are expected to follow the same
positive course, since over the first quarter of the current year profits
of certain companies in the sector have exceeded 50 per cent of total
profits for 1996.
'Posidonia 98' opens in Piraeus
Merchant Marine Minister Stavros Soumakis yesterday opened the "Poseidonia
'98" international maritime exhibition in Piraeus, the world's largest.
In his address, the minister said the Greek merchant fleet had gained first
place in the world as a result of the entrepreneurial ability and instinct
of Greek shipowners, as well as the seafaring skills of crews. He also
stressed the sector's paramount contribution to the national and the world
economy.
The exhibition's organiser, Th. Vokos, expressed his satisfaction, noting
that participations this year reached a record number of 1,500 from 72
countries.
Greek Shipowners' Union president Yiannis Lyras said the large number of
participants was proof the success of the event, which spanned nearly 30
years.
Quarterly OTE profits, turnover rise
The Hellenic Telecommunications Organisation (OTE) increased profits and
sales over the first quarter of the current year.
Pre-tax unified profits amounted to 70.489 billion drachmas, while the
turnover totalled 207.574 billion drachmas.
Although corresponding figures do not exist for last year, it is assessed
that there is an increase in the region of 12-15 per cent. Net profits with
tax amounted to 45.185 billion drachmas. The utility's predictions for
profits of 368 billion drachmas and a turnover of 979 billion drachmas are
unattainable, since results in the first quarter showed a lag in profits.
Greek participation at Verona exhibition
Greece will participate in an international marble exhibition in Verona,
Italy between Sept. 24-28.
According to an announcement by the Hellenic Foreign Trade Board (HEPO),
products to be displayed include marble and other stones, machinery for
excavating, processing, transferring and packaging stones, as well as
materials for the preservation and processing of stones.
The Verona exhibition, considered a leading event in the marble sector,
will feature about 1,500 exhibitors from 40 countries, while visitors are
expected from 115 countries.
For more information contact HEPO's exhibition department at tel. (01)
99.82.204 or the organisation's offices in Thessaloniki, (031) 26.21.20.
Athens Hospital doctors on strike tomorrow
Physicians at Athens-area and Piraeus public hospitals and clinics are
scheduled to hold a 48-hour strike tomorrow and Thursday in demand of
salary raises, including a 10 per cent pay hike and benefits granted other
civil servants.
They are also protesting against what representatives consider cutbacks in
annual leave pay.
WEATHER
Fine weather is forecast in most parts of Greece today with scattered
showers in Macedonia and Thrace in the afternoon. Winds northerly,
northwesterly, light to moderate. Athens will be sunny with temperatures
between 16-31C. Same in Thessaloniki with temperatures from 14-29C.
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
Monday's rates (buying) U.S. dollar 301.151
British pound 491.774 Japanese yen(100) 215.929
French franc 50.542 German mark 169.453
Italian lira (100) 17.197 Irish Punt 427.552
Belgian franc 8.216 Finnish mark 55.740
Dutch guilder 150.367 Danish kr. 44.493
Austrian sch. 24.087 Spanish peseta 1.996
Swedish kr. 38.569 Norwegian kr. 40.037
Swiss franc 203.653 Port. Escudo 1.656
Aus. dollar 186.263 Can. dollar 206.554
Cyprus pound 575.360
(C.E.)
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