Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

French Airport Operator ADP Buys Stake In Turkey's TAV

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • French Airport Operator ADP Buys Stake In Turkey's TAV

    FRENCH AIRPORT OPERATOR ADP BUYS STAKE IN TURKEY'S TAV

    Agence France Presse
    March 12, 2012 Monday 3:17 PM GMT

    French airport operator Aeroports de Paris said Monday it has acquired
    38 percent of the leading Turkish operator TAV, which runs Ataturk
    airport in Istanbul.

    ADP said it would pay 874 million dollars (667 million euros) for the
    holding, which values the Turkish company at 2.3 billion dollars and is
    part of the French group's strategy to expand into emerging economies.

    ADP said it paid a 32 percent premium on TAV's share price, but that
    would bring double-digit returns as TAV provided a means to expand
    into fast growing emerging markets

    TAV operates 10 airports in all: elsewhere in Turkey plus in Georgia,
    Macedonia, and Tunisia. It will soon add an airport in Saudia Arabia
    and runs food and duty free shop operations at a Latvian airport.

    The two groups run directly or indirectly a total of 37 airports
    worldwide that welcome around 180 million passengers a year.

    ADP chief executive said the investment into TAV gives it a stake in
    airports which are expanding at over 10 percent a year and that the
    deal would bring "a double-digit return on investment."

    "It is an extremely productive placement of money," he told AFP by
    telephone from Istanbul.

    "TAV, which is extremely well managed, has a strategy which we won't
    change which is to grow by acquisitions, in their zone of influence
    of course -- they are better placed in eastern Europe and the Middle
    East," Graff said.

    ADP has in recent years focused buying stakes in airports that handle
    more than 10 million passengers a year, and particularly those in
    countries like Brazil, China, India and Russia.

    TAV board chairman Hamdi Akin said the tie-up would help bring funds
    for further expansion.

    "I am convinced that it will end up being a tie-up that is strong
    both in the economic and political sphere," he was quoted as saying
    at a news conference in Istanbul by the Anatolia news agency.

    The deal was announced amid tension between Paris and Ankara after
    French lawmakers voted to introduce legislation that would make it
    a crime to deny the Armenian genocide.

    France's top court last month ruled that the legislation was
    unconstitutional but French President Nicolas Sarkozy, who is facing
    a tough re-election battle next month, has vowed to put forward a
    new bill.


    From: Baghdasarian
Working...
X