Fri, Feb 10 2012
Bulgarian private gas company Overgas has been mulling floating its shares on a European stock exchange, Overgas chief financial officer Angel Ivanov told reporters after a general shareholders' meeting, as quoted by Dnevnik daily on March 7.
According to Ivanov, the company needed fresh capital and would choose between a bond issue and a share offering to raise it. For now, the company was looking at the strengths and weaknesses of the two options and waited for better market conditions, he added.
Overgas would prefer a large European bourse to the Bulgarian Stock Exchange (BSE) because it planned a big share issue and only markets with enough financial resources would meet that requirement. Overgas could consider listing on BSE if the local bourse struck a deal with a bigger foreign peer, Ivanov said.
Last month, the company cleared its 20 million leva bond issue, paying the principal with its own operational funds, which have grown substantially due to the fast-track development of the company, Ivanov said.
Last year, company revenues rose by 57.8 per cent on the year to 677 million leva, although pre-tax profit dropped 6.11 per cent to 22.5 million leva because the company launched several new projects.
Overgas will continue its busy investment streak in 2008 as well. Construction of gas mains alone will cost 40.3 million leva, with an additional 9.7 million leva assigned for exploration and extraction of crude oil and gas off Provadia and Shabla, on Bulgaria's Black Sea shelf. Overgas also plans to open eight methane stations in Bulgaria's biggest cities.
Analysts say ČSA restructuring will be much less risky.
Under the terms of the agreement, Globul will offer the club’s fans in Bulgaria access to exclusive Manchester United news, interviews, special features and other content over its mobile network.
The switch to digital television broadcasting in Bulgaria cannot progress before a transition plan is approved
Bulgarian Government doing its best to drive strategic investors away from BDZ Cargo privatisation
Services at several banks in Bulgaria were disrupted because of the network disruption which lasted several hours on February 6 2012.

Lyubov Kostova was appointed country manager of British Council Bulgaria effective January 1, replacing Tony Buckby, who left in October 2011 to take a similar position at British Council Greece. Kostova has been with British Council Bulgaria for 11 years, as public communications manager and, since 2008, as the head of project and partnerships department. Prior to joining the British Council, Kostova was head of international activities at the National Academy for Theatre and Cinema Arts (NATFIZ). She has a degree in Indian studies from Kliment Ohridski Sofia University.

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.

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.

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.