Hellenic Postbank fails to produce financial report
The Athens stock market suspended the trading of the Hellenic
Postbank (TT) blue chip after the state-owned lender announced on
Thursday it would be unable to issue its financial report for 2011
before the deadline expires on Friday. This came one day after Finance
Minister Yannis Stournaras called the lender “non-viable” in Parliament,
paving the way for its sale.
Athens Exchange stated on Thursday
afternoon it has temporarily suspended trading of the TT stock “because
in a response to a relevant question by the Capital Market Commission it
announced at 12.53 p.m. that the publication of its annual financial
report for 2011 will not be done within the deadline provided.”
Earlier
TT had issued a statement announcing that “the publication of the
Annual Economic Report of the Group for 2011 within the deadline is not
possible due to exceptionally adverse conditions.”
The Finance
Ministry had rejected a call by the TT management for another extension
to the deadline, with Stournaras stating on Wednesday in Parliament that
TT had secured four extensions, and a fifth one would not be possible.
TT workers staged a 24-hour on Thursday in protest of the minister’s
decision.
Before the TT stock got suspended from trading it had
already suffered heavy losses amounting to just under 30 percent (29.71
percent).
Bourse observers suggested that the decline was due to
TT shareholder worries for a split of the bank into a “good” and a “bad”
side, in the same way it has been done with ATEbank, so that the
healthy operations of the lender can be sold to a private banking group.
Decisions
regarding TT concern no fewer than 70,000 shareholders, who hold more
than 50 percent of the bank’s shares, while the state holds a 35 percent
stake. |
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