Fairfax to raise stake in Eurobank Properties
Fairfax to raise stake in Eurobank Properties
  REIC

Fairfax to raise stake in Eurobank Properties

Canadian investment firm Fairfax Financial Holdings will raise its stake in Greek real estate firm
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19.06.2013

Canadian investment firm Fairfax Financial Holdings will raise its stake in Greek real estate firm Eurobank Properties to 42 percent from 19, parent Eurobank said on Wednesday.

Canadian investment firm Fairfax Financial Holdings will raise its stake in Greek real estate firm Eurobank Properties to 42 percent from 19, parent Eurobank said on Wednesday.

Fairfax and Eurobank aim to strengthen their relationship as shareholders of Eurobank Properties and boost its resources to make it a leading player in the country's real estate market.

Under the deal, Eurobank Properties will proceed with a rights offering of about 200 million euros at 4.80 euros a share, with Fairfax exercising its own rights and purchasing Eurobank's rights for 20 million euros.

After the capital increase Eurobank will hold about 33.5 percent in the real estate firm provided all other shareholders exercise their rights.

"The Greek people have worked through tremendous hardship but we think the light is now visible at the end of the tunnel,» Prem Watsa, Chairman and CEO of Fairfax, said in a statement, referring to the country's economic crisis.

Eurobank Properties has a current market capitalisation of 406 million euros. Fairfax will pump in about 164 million through the rights offering.

As part of the deal, the two sides will agree that Eurobank will retain management control at Eurobank Properties until June 2020, with Fairfax represented at the firm's board with customary veto rights.

Eurobank, Greece's fourth largest lender, opted to be fully recapitalised by a state bank rescue fund to plug a 5.84 billion euro capital hole after losses on sovereign debt writedowns and bad loans. It has fallen under the full control of the Hellenic Financial Stability Fund.

Earlier this year, Fairfax had expressed interest in taking part in National Bank's recapitalisation but a deal did not materialise as the fund's conditions could not be met.