Istanbul Stock Exchange Eyes Privatization of Bulgaria Bourse

Finance | October 2, 2012, Tuesday // 12:13|  views

The building of the Bulgarian Stock Exchange in Sofia. Photo by Sophia Photo Agency

Istanbul Stock Exchange will consider bidding bid for the privatization of the Bulgarian Stock Exchange, its chairman has said.

"As one of the largest stock exchanges in the region, we are willing to consider all possible options. If we find the acquisition of the Bulgarian Stock Exchange to be a suitable and profitable option, we will consider it. Unless, of course, privatization is limited only to the major stock players," Ibrahim Turkan said in an interview for Capital daily.

He pointed out that Istanbul Stock Exchange holds stakes in the exchanges in Sarajevo, Baku and Kyrgyzstan.

Bulgaria hopes to find an investor for its only stock exchange by the end of this year after failing to do so by the beginning of the summer as initially planned.

For sale is the government's stakes of just above 50% in the Bulgarian bourse and in the Central Depository, which clears and settles trades and also acts as a register of securities.

"We have spoken to many exchanges and they seem to be quite interested, but that doesn't necessarily mean they're potential acquirers," BSE Chief Executive Ivan Takev said in the middle of June on the sidelines of the Federation of European Securities Exchanges conference in Istanbul.

Takev said the bourse is worth about EUR 10 million, which means a sale of the stake would be worth around EUR 5 million. However, the depository is not a listed firm, so its valuation and sale price would have to be calculated by the consultants in charge of selling the assets.

At the end of last year insiders told local media that the government's hopes to sell the majority stake in the bourse by the end of 2011 have gone sour as no bidders had declared interest.

Shortly after the Bulgarian Stock Exchange launched the sale of its shares in January 2011, Finance Minister Simeon Djankov announced that there is a "huge" interest among investors. CEE Stock Exchange Group however was the only one to openly declare its interest, but no detailed talks have been held so far.

Bulgaria's only stock exchange became a public company in the middle of December 2010 after the Financial Supervision Commission approved its prospectus and the bourse was listed on its own platform. The capital of the bourse is a total of BGN 6 582 860 at BGN 1 apiece.

Bulgaria's Finance Ministry raised at the beginning of October its share to 50% plus one share from 44% in the country's stock exchange. The government bought 715,000 shares at BN 1 apiece. The bourse will sell the remaining 50% held by private investors including brokerages and banks.

The shareholders said the move aims to ease the future privatisation of the exchange and the search for a strategic investor.

Since 2008, the stock exchange has traded on the Deutsche Boerse's Xetra platform under a contract that expires in 2012. Bulgaria has discussed ways to sell its bourse stake over the past decade with Sweden's OMX AG and exchanges in Austria, Greece and Poland to boost interest in local stocks and make trading more transparent.

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Tags: Istanbul Stock Exchange, Ivan Takev, Simeon Djankov, finance minister, Financial Supervision Commission, Victor Papazov, Bulgarian Stock Exchange, Finance Ministry, stock exchange, Bulgaria, Ibrahim Turkan

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