DFDS Tor Lines May Suspend LISCO Deal

Published: 24 June 2001 y., Sunday
In accordance with the recently adopted amendments the Danish company will have to officially offer the minority LISCO shareholders to buy the remaining stock at a price no less than paid for the shares in the state ownership. Kestutis Glaveckas, Chairman of the Lithuanian Seim budget and finance committee, communicated the Government received on June 15 a letter wherein the DFDS Tor Lines management requests the from Government permission to lift the amendments for the LISCO deal as the company intends to independently negotiate the solution with the minority stockholders. The state owned 80% of LISCO, a shipping monopoly operating on the Lithuania - West Europe routes. In accordance with the agreement of April 23, 2001, between the state property Fund and DFDS Tor Lines, 76.36% of this stock was sold for $47.6 million. 20% of the stock remained in the hands of minority shareholders and financial brokers. The latter demand the Danish company buy their shares for the same price the state-owned stock was sold for - $1.2 per share. However, DFDS Tor Lines does not show any intention of doing so. The privatization plan provides for two companies to be established. One of them, Lisco Baltic service, a ferry operator, will own 70% of the LISCO property. DFDS Tor Lines will hold a 76.36% stake in this company, the state will get 3.4%, and minority shareholders - slightly over 20%.
Šaltinis: SeaNews
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Parex Bankas is to refinance LTL 19.5 million for small and medium-sized enterprises

Parex Bankas won the tender organised by UAB Investicijų ir Verslo Garantijos regarding the financing of very small, small and medium-sized enterprises, and is to lend LTL 100 million together with other three selected banks. more »

Commission approves aid package for German bank WestLB

The European Commission has approved, under EC Treaty state aid rules, the €5 billion risk shield for German bank WestLB and accompanying measures, following an in-depth investigation opened in October 2008. more »

Capital Requirements Directive - rapporteur Karas interviewed

MEPs have backed new rules to rebuild trust in Europe's battered banks through better financial supervision and risk management. more »

AB Bank SNORAS changes the interest rates on time deposits

Taking into consideration the tendencies in the market, starting from 11 May this year AB Bank SNORAS will change the interest rates on time deposits in Litas, Euro, Great Britain pounds and USA dollars. more »

VW, Porsche in merger talks

Now VW and Porsche who are looking into a merger. more »

Small business, big ideas

First European SME week supports small businesses and encourages entrepreneurship. more »

Twist of fate: $120,000 found at ATM

Officials at an El Paso bank said $120,000 found at an ATM doesn't belong to the bank. more »

MEPs adopt strict conditions for the placing on the market of seal products in the European Union

The placing on the market of seal products should not be allowed say MEPs. It is permitted only where the seal products result from hunts traditionally conducted by Inuit and other indigenous communities. more »

Obama's corporate tax crackdown

President Barack Obama is calling on Congress to overhaul tax policies that he said reward companies for shifting U.S. jobs overseas and allow wealthy people to evade taxes using offshore accounts. more »

Animals used in science, seal ban debated Monday

MEPs will discuss the protection of animals used for science Monday evening along with a proposal to ban the trade in seal products. more »