Business News
In this week’s Business News: deflation takes to the Czech stage, Belgian banking group seen boosting Prague exchange, multiplex operator gets bigger screen role, ČEZ turns up the heat, and more Scrooge at Czech Christmas
Deflation makes brief Czech appearance
The demon of deflation made an appearance on the Czech economic scene this
week. Consumer prices in October were reported down 0.2 of a percentage
point compared with September and compared with the same month a year
earlier. But the Czech National Bank has dismissed worries that the fearful
phenomenon of consumers holding off purchases because prices continue to
fall could take hold. Its latest inflation report sees zero growth in
prices for the end of this year and start of 2010. And it says inflation
could even climb above its 2.0 percent target by the end of the 2010. The
bank also expects mild growth of 1.4 percent next year and just above 2.0
percent in 2011.
ČSOB shares seen launching on Prague exchange
The Czech capital market has had the profile of a sad suitor with few new
companies launching their shares there in recent years. But there is good
news apparently in store for the Prague exchange from the bad news that has
hit Belgian banking group KBC. The Belgian group is the biggest shareholder
in the Czech bank ČSOB and according to reports in the Flemish press is
ready to launch around 50 billion crowns worth of ČSOB shares on the local
market. That is the equivalent of about 40 percent of ČSOB. The Belgian
banking group is being pressured by EU competition watchdogs to sell off
some of its prize assets as the price for state support given during the
financial crisis.
ČEZ stakes out local heat market
Czech power giant ČEZ has bought a bigger stake in the local heat market.
The state-controlled colossus announced a deal with the French parent
company of Dalkia Czech Republic to take a 15 percent stake in the biggest
Czech heat and power company and take control of one its local businesses
based in the northern city of Ustí nad Labem. The deals are worth around
9.0 billion crowns. ČEZ sees the deal as the price for future strategic
cooperation with Dalkia. But it has also admitted that it wants to unseat
Dalkia as the number one local heat company because this is about the only
local market where it can grow.
CineStar bags bigger role in multiplex cinema market
The picture of the booming Czech multiplex cinema market has become
clearer over the last few days. The country’s biggest operator CineStar
has bought out one of its biggest rivals Village Cinemas Czech Republic.
One of the main results for CineStar will be a foothold in Prague for the
first time with the acquisition of two multiplex complexes in the capital.
The deal takes CineStar’s total number of screens to 83 and seats to
nearly 14,700. Company revenues rose by around a quarter in 2008 but
profits were flat.
More modest Christmas on the cards
And finally, a more modest Christmas is on the cards for Czech households.
They will on average spend around 13,400 crowns — around 500 euros — on
the annual bonanza according to the annual survey by consulting company
Deloitte. That is a 2.5 percent drop compared to the previous year. The
survey sees the biggest cut falling on festive cultural spending with a
whopping 8.4 percent drop. Spending on gifts for the loved and not so loved
is set to decline by 2.3 percent but there will be hardly any belt
tightening on the food and drink budget.





