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Wolf Theiss conference sees value In Balkan investments

The countries of particular interest to investors should be the region’s recent EU entrants – Slovenia, Romania, Bulgaria and Croatia – as well as prospective member state Serbia. Wolf Theiss, with offices in all these countries, has been involved in various projects in the region, including acting as a legal adviser in the acquisition of Luka Rijeka d.d., the operator of the largest Croatian port, by leading Polish transport company OT Logistics S.A.

“Balkan countries are, to a large extent, a land of opportunities for private equity funds, as well as for industry investors implementing ambitious expansion strategies or seeking assets that would complement their existing operations,” said Stefan Feliniak, Attorney At Law at Wolf Theiss in Warsaw.

“Supporting the foreign expansion of Polish companies is one of the key areas of our strategy.We note Polish businesses’ increasing interest in the Balkans. The executed transactions and our pipeline shows that the region may be a source of bankable projects,” said Arkadiusz Zabłoński, Director at Bank Gospodarstwa Krajowego.

“There is a wide range of attractive business sectors, from logistics to food processing to financial services. Many companies in the region are undergoing deep restructuring as they seek to strengthen or defend their positions in the enlarged EU bloc,” said Andrew de Roy, Managing Partner at Bearstone Global, that has recently published a report on the financial distress of the Croatian FMCG giant – Agrokor. “That means there are lots of good assets looking for buyers as well as cheap distressed sales coming to the market.”

“The financial-services sector has been one of key industries undergoing an overhaul in the Balkans in recent years, with international investors seeking to acquire portfolios of non-performing loans (NPL) and distressed securities at an attractive discount,” said Michael Cullinane of Schottentor Capital in Vienna. “The Balkan region is very diversified and each country is different. A good strategy and meticulous selection of investment targets can bring great return potential in Europe.”

At the macro level, the region’s countries are following a path already taken by earlier EU entrants, as valuations rise toward Western European levels.

“Investors who have already found solid results on convergence plays in markets like the Visegrad countries of Poland, the Czech Republic and Hungary are now moving into the Balkans, looking to replicate their winning formula in our region,” said Luka Tadić-Čolić, Partner at Wolf Theiss’s Zagreb office.

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