Business News
iDnes - fourth mobile network to challenge O2, Vodafone & T-Mobile
The Czech Republic's three mobile phone operators could become four in the
not-too-distant future, the iDnes news server reported this week. iDnes
said the Czech Telecoms Office had granted a code and allocated numbers
for a new network. The name of the operator is not yet known, but the
licence is held by a company called Mobilkom, linked to the Central
European investment group Penta. The new operator will compete with the
three existing mobile phone networks - O2, Vodafone and T-Mobile.
Czech petrol prices unaffected by Russia-Belarus oil spat
The Czech Republic seemed to emerged unscathed from Russia's spat with
Belarus over oil supplies, analysts said. The three-day suspension of
Russian oil supplies to Central Europe had no effect on the price of
petrol or diesel at Czech filling stations. Analysts said prices remained
unaffected because the dispute had been resolved quickly. Nonetheless,
governments in the EU appear to be increasingly nervous about reliance on
Russian energy supplies.
Kapsch to sue Autostrade over motorway toll tender complaint
There was a new twist in the motorway toll saga this week when the company
that built the toll network - Austria's Kapsch - announced it was planning
to sue unsuccessful Italian bidder Autostrade. Kapsch's CEO Karel Feix
told the media that Autostrade's decision to file a complaint over the
tender had led to costly delays. Kapsch claims Autostrade used misleading
information to justify the complaint.
Anheuser Busch, Budvar sign bizarre deal amidst legal war over "Budweiser"
Photo: CTK
Two of the fiercest rivals in the world of brewing - US beer giant
Anheuser Busch and Czech brewer Budejovicky Budvar - signed a distribution
deal this week, despite their ongoing battle over the brand name Budweiser.
Under the deal, Anheuser Busch will distribute Budvar beer in the US under
the trade name "Czechvar". However the deal has no effect on the
legal battle over the use of the Budweiser brand, which has been raging for
more than a century.
Prague Post - Irish company to bring free wireless Internet to Prague
There was good news for Internet users this week, after the Prague Post
newspaper reported that an Irish company was planning to introduce free
broadband wireless access in the city's cafes and hotels. The first
wireless hotspot will be unveiled at Prague's Cafe Vysehrad on January
20th, with hundreds more introduced throughout the year. The service, run
by a company called Anacapa, is supported by advertisements.
Skoda Auto has record year
The carmaker Skoda Auto said it had enjoyed a record year in 2006, with
sales up 11.7 percent to a record high of 550,000. Skoda Auto, a
subsidiary of the Volkswagen Group, said the results had exceeded
management's expectations. The company, based in Mlada Boleslav, near
Prague, said it had taken on 700 new employees and would employ even more
staff this year.
6.6 million foreign tourists visit Czech Rep in 2006
The Association of Czech Travel Agencies say they too had a good year last
year, with the number of foreign tourists growing four percent year-on-year
to around 6.6 million. They brought with them a lot of money - spending
around 113 billion crowns, or some 5.2 billion dollars in the country.
Germans accounted for around a quarter of the foreign visitors, followed
by Britons, Italians and Americans. The figures showed that the number of
Russians choosing to visit the Czech Republic on holiday is rising
steadily.
PPF buys small Belarussian bank
Petr Kellner
And a Belarussian news agency reported this week that Czech tycoon Petr
Kellner - sometimes described as the country's richest man - had acquired
a small Belarussian bank. Kellner, co-owner of the Czech investment group
PPF, is reported to have bought Lorobank for 4.8 million euros. A
spokeswoman for PPF said the deal had not been finalised.







