Business News
Singer: central bank may postpone cutting interest rates
The Czech central bank may delay cutting interest rates because the
inflationary impact of economic growth may be stronger than the bank
forecast last month, Deputy Governor Miroslav Singer said on Thursday.
Scope for lowering rates has diminished because wages and employment are
rising and exporters have weathered the strengthening of the crown. The
inflation rate peaked at a decade high of 7.5 percent in the first two
months of this year. In May, inflation held at 6.8 percent. Bankers have
been ‘surprised’, Mr Singer said, by the gains of the crown in the last
year – the Czech currency has advanced by 17 percentage points against
the euro in the last twelve months alone.
Prague Airport privatization attracts 65 bidders
The Czech government’s plan to privatise Prague’s Ruzyně Airport has
really taken off, attracting much more attention than ministers originally
expected. Some 65 bidders have voiced their interest in the airport,
Transport Minister Aleš Řebíček told Austrian paper WirtschaftsBlatt on
Friday. The transport minister said he was not looking for a ‘purely
financial investor’, but instead a ‘strategic partner’ for the
airport, though he did admit that the airport was likely to be sold to the
highest bidder. The government approved plans to sell Prague Airport at the
beginning of June. They are hoping to find a buyer by the end of 2009 in a
sale likely to raise over 100 billion CZK (6.36 billion USD) for state
coffers.
Seventy thousand foreigners come to Czech Republic to work in last year
Foto: European Commission
Prague airport was most likely the first port of call for some of the
70,000 foreigners who have come to the Czech Republic to work in the last
12 months. The number of foreign nationals now legally working in the
country totals around 268,000, though thousands more are thought to be here
without a residency permit. Vietnamese nationals constituted the fastest
growing group of labour migrants, while the number of Slovaks -
traditionally this country’s largest group of immigrants - fell. Just 500
Slovaks have arrived in the Czech Republic to work in the first five months
of this year, down from 3000 in the same period last year.
Lloyd’s insurers set to break into the Czech market
Another new arrival to the Czech Republic is set to be one of the
world’s most important insurance companies, Lloyd’s, which will start
selling its products on the Czech market as of next year. The European
manager of the company, Enrico Bertagna, made the announcement on
Wednesday. He added that Lloyd’s would apply for a licence in the last
quarter of this year. The application should be processed within the
following five months. Mr Bertagna said the company would offer above all
liability insurance to companies and managers. It might also insure
economic risks taken by government institutions in the Czech Republic.
Lloyd’s has been present on the Czech market for a number of years, but
it has only provided reinsurance so far. It is not clear how much money the
insurers want to invest in their Czech business.
Petrof wins legal battle against GIC, but the war continues
The discord between Czech piano maker Petrof and US trading company Geneva
International Corporation (GIC) continues, with the Czech firm winning the
latest in a series of arbitration cases against its former American
distributor. An arbitration court in Hradec Kralové, Eastern Bohemia,
ruled that Petrof was right to terminate a year-long contract with its US
distributor, after GIC refused to buy the instruments that Petrof was
supplying. Following on from the verdict, Petrof’s lawyer Pavel Vidura
said the victory showed that the Czech firm may win a similar case
currently pending in the United States. GIC has already been forced by an
American court to pay the piano producer damages to the tune of 134,000 USD
in a dispute over supplied and unpaid for musical instruments in 2006.





