Thu, Feb 09 2012

STOCK WATCH: Careful on the trend

Mon, Apr 30 2007 09:00 CET 402 Views

In the first two days of the week, Bulgarian shares moved up on the Bulgarian Stock Exchange (BSE), but brokers were careful not to make brave predictions for a longer upward trend.

The blue-chip Sofix index, which includes the 16 most-liquid shares on the BSE, added 0.15 per cent to finish at 1280.63 points on April 24. The broader BG40 index move up by 0.04 per cent to reach 252.98 points. Stock exchange indices edged higher in low volumes, rising for a third day in succession amid positive sentiment.

"Apparently there is some kind of revival on the market, but turnover is still too low to say this for sure," Kliment Rudinski, a trader at Sofia-based brokerage Bulbrokers, told SeeNews agency. Total BSE turnover fell to 10.9 million leva from 11.2 million on April 23.

The players on the market tend to focus on the the upcoming flotations of two Bulgarian-based banks, Rudinski said. First Investment Bank and Corporate Commercial Bank are expected to raise their capital via initial public offerings on the BSE next month.

Among the most liquid shares on April 24 were blue-chip industrial conglomerate Chimimport and fuel trader Petrol. Chimimport went up by 0.19 per cent to 10.03 leva on turnover of nearly 115 000 shares, after rising 1.68 per cent in the previous session. The holding told a news conference on April 23 that it had restructuring plans and result projections for most of its units.

Petrol lost two per cent to finish at 4.80 leva with 221 500 shares changing hands.

On April 23, Bulgarian Telecommunications Company (BTC) was among the most traded on the BSE. BTC rose 0.83 per cent to 12.10 leva with more than 237 000 shares changing hands. According to brokers, an inflow of funds freed after two initial public offerings held the week of April 16 is very likely to be the reason for the upswing of the market. An exmaple of this is wine maker Todoroff, who, on April 19, sold a third of its capital in an IPO, which was 4.5 times oversubscribed. Its shares ended at 2.02 leva on April 23, down 0.04 per cent.

Industrial minerals producer Kaolin raised 61.8 million leva in its offering, which was more than three times oversubscribed. Kaolin will start trading on the BSE in late May.

Total turnover on the BSE rose to 11.2 million leva from 3.8 million leva on April 21, which was a working day.

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CEZ

CEZ

Stefan Apostolov is the new chief executive of CEZ Razpredelenie Bulgaria, the power transmission subsidiary of Czech energy company CEZ in the country. He replaces interim chief executive Ales Damm, who remains the chairperson of the CEZ Razpredelenie management board. Apostolov has 30 years of experience in the energy sector, joining CEZ in 2007 as director of customer service and was later appointed as head of business development. Apostolov has a master's degree in electric systems from the Belorussian National Technical University in Minsc, management diplomas from Open University London and New Bulgarian University, as well as a master's degree in business administration from Plovdiv University.

Rompetrol Bulgaria

Rompetrol Bulgaria

Alexander Albin has been appointed chief executive of fuel distributor Rompetrol Bulgaria, replacing Nichita Sorin, who left to become chief executive of Rompetrol Gaz in Romania. Albin was previously chief executive of Rompetrol Georgia. He has more than 15 years of experience in the oil and gas industry; prior to joining Romania's oil group Rompetrol in 2008 as an adviser, he oversaw operations at Atyrau refinery in Kazakhstan, owned by Rompetrol's parent company KazMunaiGaz. He previously held top management positions at two other leading Kazakh oil and gas companies.

BASF Bulgaria

BASF Bulgaria

Valentina Dikanska is the new general manager of chemical industry giant BASF subsidiary in Bulgaria, taking over from Herbert Fisch, BASF vice president for Southeastern Europe. Dikanska, who started her career as an expert in the Finance Ministry, joined BASF Bulgaria as director of finance and administration in 2002. She becomes the first Bulgarian to hold the top management position in the company in its 40-year history on the Bulgarian market. Dikanska holds a master's degree in economics from the University for National and World Economy in Sofia.