Category: Greece

  • DLA Piper and AP Legal Advise Kerzner International on Joint Venture to Develop and Manage Luxury Tourism Project in Greece

    DLA Piper and AP Legal Advise Kerzner International on Joint Venture to Develop and Manage Luxury Tourism Project in Greece

    DLA Piper has advised Kerzner International Holdings Limited, an international developer and operator of ultra-luxury resorts and residences, on its joint venture with private equity firm Dolphin Capital Partners and Dolphin Capital Investors for the development and management of the One&Only Kea Island, Greece, a luxury tourism project on the Cycladic island of Kea. Local input was provided by AP Legal in Greece and L Papaphilippou & Co LLC in Cyprus.

    According to DLA Piper, the new resort, situated across 65 hectares, “will include 75 resort villas, a spa, beach club, leisure and dining facilities, as well as a number of branded private homes for purchase. One&Only Kea Island, Greece will be the first One&Only resort in Greece and second in Europe, with the resort expected to be developed in time for the 2020 season.”

    The DLA Piper team was led by Partner Ben Gillespie, Regional Head of Corporate, Middle East, with assistance from Legal Director Helen Hangari and Legal Consultant Natalia Tombs. 

    The AP Legal team in Greece was led by Partners Aris Papaspyridis and Alexandra Papaspyridis and Senior Associate Afroditi Vasiliou.

  • KG Law Advises Minoan Lines on Sale of Stake in Hellenic Seaways to Attica Holdings

    KG Law Advises Minoan Lines on Sale of Stake in Hellenic Seaways to Attica Holdings

    Kyriakides Georgopoulos has advised the listed company Minoan Lines S.A. and its major shareholder Grimaldi Group on negotiations for and the conclusion of a framework agreement with Attica Holdings S.A. related to its investment in Hellenic Seaways S.A. 

    According to Kyriakides Georgopoulos, “the parties have agreed to a number of transactions which will be completed once the relevant clearance from the Hellenic Competition Commission is obtained. The transaction involves the sale of Minoan’s 49% stake in Hellenic Seaways to Attica and the purchase of  two vessels, raising the total transaction value to approximately 180 million. Once approved, the transaction is expected to rationalize the current market structure and reshape the Greek cabotage landscape in the future.”

    The KG team was led by Partner Konstantinos Vouterakos, assisted by Competition Partner Anastasia Dritsa and Associates Michalis Makris and Iakovos Sarmas.

    KG Law did not reply to an inquiry about counsel for Attica Holdings on the deal.

  • Norton Rose Fulbright Advises Alpha Bank on Second Shipping Securitization

    Norton Rose Fulbright Advises Alpha Bank on Second Shipping Securitization

    Norton Rose Fulbright has advised Alpha Bank on its second shipping securitization, which raised USD 250 million. The transaction was arranged and financed by Citi.

    According to Norton Rose Fulbright “the financing, a non-recourse 4-year term dollar funding, entailed a unique loan style structure and follows Alpha Bank’s shipping securitization raising approximately USD 500 million in 2014, on which Norton Rose Fulbright also advised. It is the only shipping securitization transaction to be placed by a Greek bank and one of very few shipping securitization transactions globally.”

    Norton Rose Fulbright Partner David Shearer, who led the firm’s team, supported by Associate Merel Klinkers, commented that: “This financing structure provides a unique solution. It demonstrates the utility of structured finance techniques for crafting bespoke arrangements for financing high value portfolios.”

  • Kyriakides Georgopoulos Advises Frigoglass Group on Debt and Capital Restructuring

    Kyriakides Georgopoulos Advises Frigoglass Group on Debt and Capital Restructuring

    Kyriakides Georgopoulos has assisted the Frigoglass group on the completion of its debt and capital restructuring process.

    Kyriakides Georgopoulos describes Frigoglass as “a global leader in the Ice Cold Merchandisers and Glass markets,” and reports that “the restructuring of the group’s debt involved implementing a debt-for-equity swap and discount for the existing creditors and the entry into new first and second lien indebtedness to refinance existing indebtedness and provide new liquidity to the group, while a rights issue was also required to implement the additional equity contribution by Frigoglass’ largest shareholder.

    According to KG, “among the key benefits to the group is significant deleveraging, including reducing the gross indebtedness by approximately €138 million, improved liquidity for the group with an additional EUR 70 million to fund its business needs as well as restructuring-related expenses, a reduction in interest cost and the extension of the maturity of the group’s existing indebtedness for around 4.5 years.”

    The KG team was led by Partner Theodore Rakintzis and included Associate Dimitris Dimitriadis and Junior Associate Fotoula Kostourou.

  • DLA Piper Establishes EU-Greek Practice in Brussels

    DLA Piper Establishes EU-Greek Practice in Brussels

    DLA Piper has announced the establishment of a Brussels-based EU-Greek Practice.

    According to DLA Piper, the new practice will offer “a full cycle of EU-related services to Greek and Cypriot businesses and governmental organizations, and to international businesses active on the Greek market. It will serve as a gateway in two directions: inbound and outbound – to and from Greece.

    In addition, the firm reports, “together with DLA Piper’s dedicated EU Government Affairs team, the EU-Greek Practice is in a unique position to represent the interests of Greek clients at the law- and policy-making levels of the EU Institutions in Brussels.”

    The practice will be headed by Counsel Orestis Omran.

  • The Buzz in Greece: Interview with Panagiotis Drakopoulos

    The Buzz in Greece: Interview with Panagiotis Drakopoulos

    Things seem to be picking up a bit in Greece, according to Drakopoulos Managing Partner Panagiotis Drakopoulos — but he knows better than to relax. “I’m much more hopeful than I was last year,” he says, “but you have to adapt to the environment. You can only hear so many times that ‘now things are changing.’ We’ve heard this for three or four years, but things don’t, in fact, change. The same thing happened in 2014 — things picked up a lot, and then the crisis hit again.” He sighs. “We definitely have more work than last year, but I don’t see a clear path to the light at the end of the tunnel, so it’s hard to be too confident about how things will develop.” 

    Still, for the moment at least, Drakopoulos reports a noticeable increase in work, driven in large part by business related to the General Data Protection Regulation. “We are doing a lot of GDPR work,” Drakopoulos says. “It’s the new thing.” He says that his firm created a special team for GDPR compliance in all its four offices (in Greece, Romania, Albania, and Cyprus) at the beginning of the year, but that it in fact he and his colleagues “have been doing a lot of data protection work for the past 15 years or so, so it’s something we know and don’t have to invent. We know what it’s all about.” 

    The GDPR isn’t the only cause for optimism. Drakopoulos says “the climate is slightly better, and there is interest in investments.” He says, “we’re working on some with foreign investors on potential deals — one is in real estate and the other is in agriculture — so, though no deals have been closed yet, things are moving better.” In addition, he says, “real estate is active — it’s starting to move. You can see that the prices that are picking up. But everyone is waiting to see what might happen. They are waiting for the economy to stabilize.”

    And Drakopoulos is skeptical that the government will be able to help much with that process. “They have the new incentives law for investment,” he says, “but things are so volatile, that they start one thing, then they negate it with another thing. The problem we have is that we need stability and credibility. It’s hard to say that the tax environment alone is enough.”

    Ultimately, Drakopoulos believes that, after so many years of disappointment, it’s simply too soon to claim the dark days are over. “I’m reserved,” he says. “We’ll have to see. Things are very volatile. It depends on how the economy will evolve.”

  • Drakopoulos Advises Hellenic Petroleum on GDPR Compliance

    Drakopoulos Advises Hellenic Petroleum on GDPR Compliance

    Drakopoulos Greece has advised Hellenic Petroleum Group of Companies with respect to the group’s compliance with the General Data Protection Regulation.

    According to Drakopoulos, “the project includes thorough monitoring of the group’s internal policies and procedures in order to identify potential gaps with the requirements of GDPR and meet the tight deadline of May 25, 2018 – as GDPR’S implementation date.”

    The firm’s team included Partner Michalis Kosmopoulos and Senior Associates Mariliza Kyparissi and Evangelos Margaritis.

  • Greek Labor Sector Stays Mired in High Unemployment Rates as Debt Crisis Goes On

    Almost nine years since the onset of the Greek debt crisis, the country’s deep and prolonged recession has led to a substantial decline in ordinary financial activity and has swept away a quarter of Greece’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP), an aftermath usually observed in times of war. 

    The ongoing crisis has had an extremely negative effect on Greece’s labor market as well, as more than one million jobs have been lost (in a country of 11 million people). Unemployment has reached 27% – the highest percentage in the EU and more than twice the average in the Eurozone – and twice that among ages 15-25.

    Besides the already-existing structural problems of the Greek labor sector, austerity measures have definitely played a significant role in the rise of unemployment; namely, in an attempt to reduce huge budget deficits, Greece had to implement a severe fiscal consolidation program by dramatically reducing government and public spending and implementing important reforms and restructuring procedures in practically all sectors of social, business, and economic life.  

    Extensive labor market reforms have been effected amid efforts to restructure the labor market, improve competitiveness, boost the economy, and thus reduce unemployment. Prior to the debt crisis, the Greek labor market was a highly-regulated market in comparison to the markets of other EU countries. Such enhanced regulatory activity continued post-crisis, as a series of legislative reforms were enacted in order to address market rigidities, obtain a higher degree of labor market flexibility, reduce the cost of wages, and encourage businesses to employ more workers, especially of younger ages. 

    Such reforms included, inter alia:  Reducing the minimum wage, which was reduced even more for young employees (ages 15-25); reducing overtime costs; extending the probation period; reducing the severance payment upon dismissal; facilitating part time and rotation work; increasing the retirement threshold; and abolishing the requirement that governmental authorization be obtained for collective dismissals.

    Such measures have had little impact on the overall unemployment picture, however, as the fundamental problem remains: The persistent lack of labor demand.  Meanwhile, budget constraints and cuts in public spending stand in the way of expanding temporary subsidized public work programs (most of which are EU-funded), the majority of which are targeted towards young people.   

    In these circumstances, the situation seems bleak both for those who have managed to maintain their employment status and for the underemployed, who are floating in and out of low-paid, temporary, part time, or uninsured jobs. 

    Of course, the worst and most worrying problem is that unemployment is not simply an economic figure or an economic problem. It is foremost a serious social problem that tends to have a detrimental effect on individuals, often tearing into the fabric of society.  Unemployment causes misery, poverty, and indebtedness, is catastrophic for people’s self-esteem, leads to depression, desperation, and suicidal thoughts, and wastes any potential they have.  It is directly linked with increases in the crime rate. The longer people stay out of work, the more unemployable they become. 

    In contrast with the common pattern in other EU countries, in Greece, highly qualified persons holding university degrees have a higher risk of being unemployed or underemployed.  That leads talented and highly skilled persons, especially young ones, to emigrate in search of a better future. As a result, Greece is not only faced with serious economic problems but also with a Brain Drain – suffering the loss of the most significant factor for economic growth and development: Its young, highly-educated workforce.

    In the absence of a rapid and dramatic economic turnaround, an entire generation faces a grim future. Despite measures taken at different levels, it is clear that the ever-growing unemployment rate will not stop or slow down until the debt crisis is finally over and the economy stabilizes and improves.

    By Georgia Konstantinidou, Partner, Drakopoulos

    This Article was originally published in Issue 4.6 of the CEE Legal Matters Magazine. If you would like to receive a hard copy of the magazine, you can subscribe here.

  • Norton Rose Fulbright Advises on Unbundling and Partial Privatization of Greek Electricity TSO

    Norton Rose Fulbright Advises on Unbundling and Partial Privatization of Greek Electricity TSO

    Norton Rose Fulbright has advised the Hellenic Republic on the ownership unbundling of the Greek power grid operator, ADMIE, from the Public Power Corporation, and the partial privatization of ADMIE through the sale of a 24% interest to the State Grid Corporation of China.

    PPC is Greece’s vertically integrated power generation and electricity supply company. The transaction involved a divestment by PPC of a 24% interest in ADMIE to State Grid for EUR 327.6 million and a 25% interest to DES ADMIE, a state-owned SPV, for EUR 295.6 million and a transfer of the remaining 51% interest to ADMIE Holding, an SPV owned by PPC’s shareholders. The transaction also included the capitalization of ADMIE reserves amounting to EUR 131 million that were distributed to PPC through a subsequent decrease in ADMIE share capital.

    Norton Rose Fulbright assisted the Hellenic Republic in the structuring of the multi-staged transaction, which was successfully negotiated with the European Commission, acting on behalf of the European Stability Mechanism, as well as the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund, which are involved in the Greek support program.

    Norton Rose Fulbright Partner Dimitris Assimakis commented that: “This has been a highly complex and challenging transaction that was completed in just 15 months. Within the pressing timeline and the government debt limitations set out under the third support program, the Hellenic Republic successfully achieved its two main objectives, to secure State control over the Greek electricity transmission system and enable the participation of a significant strategic investor, such as State Grid, in ADMIE.”

    Norton Rose Fulbright also assisted in drafting relevant legislation for the implementation of the transaction structure and subsequent amendments to the law and advised on other matters, such as the shareholders agreement with State Grid and obtaining necessary approvals from EU and national authorities. The deal closed on June 20, 2017.

    The Norton Rose Fulbright team was led by Partners Vassilis Koroxenidis and Dimitris Assimakis, assisted by Senior Associate Minas Kitsilis and Associate Sergios Karotsieris in Athens. The team also included Partner Christian Filippitsch and Senior Associate Max Seuster in Brussels, who advised on merger control, state aid, and EU energy regulatory matters.

  • Zepos & Yannopoulos Advises Attica Bank on Securitization of NPLs and Future Receivables

    Zepos & Yannopoulos Advises Attica Bank on Securitization of NPLs and Future Receivables

    Zepos & Yannopoulos, working alongside Shearman Sterling, has acted as Greek legal counsel to Attica Bank SA, a Greek medium size bank, on the securitization of non-performing loans and future receivables from the EUR 1.3 billion sale of real estate. The portfolio was sold to a Luxembourg SPV against issuance of EUR 525 million senior notes and EUR 806.2 million junior notes. All the notes were initially subscribed by Attica Bank, which will also act as interim servicer of the portfolio.

    Bahas, Grammatides & Partners announced that it “led and coordinated the team of legal advisors of Attica Bank SA on the transaction.”

    In parallel, Attica Bank entered into a sale and purchase agreement with Aldridge EDC Specialty Finance, the principal owner of a multinational investor in and manager of distressed assets, to sell the junior notes, as well as 80% of Thea Artemis SA, a subsidiary of Attica Bank that holds a license by the Bank of Greece to manage banking credit. Aldridge was advised by Jones Day, with the G. Spiliotopoulos law office providing local counsel.

    Completion of the sale and purchase agreement is subject to approval by the Bank of Greece, following which Thea Artemis SA is expected to undertake the management of the securitized portfolio.

    According to Zepos & Yannopoulos, “this milestone transaction involved the sale of receivables arising from a diversified portfolio of non-performing credit products and of future receivables arising from the sale and/or leasing of real estate that are the underlying assets of financial leasing receivables, also included in the portfolio.”

    The firm also reports that “the transaction is the first to combine the long-tested Greek securitization law framework with the recently introduced law on the licensing of banking credit managers; it steps up the creation of an efficient secondary market for non-performing loans in Greece and offers a seamless legal structure for future transactions.”

    The Zepos & Yannopoulos team was led by Partner Christina Papanikolopoulou, assisted by Associates Mary Nigritinou and Athina Palli. Tax advice was provided by Partner Daphne Cozonis and Senior Associate Katerina Vagia.

    The Bahas, Grammatides & Partners team was led by Managing Partner Dimitris Emvalomenos and included Senior Associate Christos Gramatidis.