Ellaktor
Anonymi Etairia | |
Traded as | Athex: ELLAKTOR |
Industry | Construction, energy, mining |
Founded | 1977 |
Headquarters | Nea Kifissia, Greece |
Key people |
Anastassios Kallitsantsis (Chairman) Leonidas Bobolas (MD) |
Services | Infrastructure construction; road construction and operation concessions; waste management; electricity generation; renewable energy; real estate investment |
Revenue | €5.960 billion (2015)[1] |
€642.85 million (2015)[1] | |
Profit | €684.95 million (2015)[1] |
Total assets | €7.121 billion (2015)[1] |
Total equity | €2.092 billion (2015)[1] |
Owner |
Leonidas Bobolas (15%)[2] Mitica Limited (5%)[3] |
Number of employees | 7.795 (end 2015)[1] |
Subsidiaries | Gemaco,[4] Aktor, REDS, Elpedison Power, Biosar, Hellenic Quarries, Herhof & Helector, Ellinki Technomiki Anemos |
Website | ellaktor.gr |
Ellaktor SA is a multinational Greek construction group (largest in Greece) with operations spanning various sectors of public and private development (real estate, energy (biogas and others), railway (Athens-Piraeus Electric Railways upgrade),[5] fuel pipes, other infrastructure development) in ten countries.[6] Internationally it operates in Oman (Blue City project through subsidiary Aktor, it is the largest key project abroad (€629 million giving it 50% interest),[7] Serbia, Bucharest & Russia (waste management, in Russia it is currently the preferred bidder for a concession), Qatar (airport, 40%) as well as UAE, Kuwait and Dubai. It is also a holding company that owns interest in European Goldfields (19.36%, primarily to give it access to Hellas Gold (which it also has a 5% direct stake in) and the Hellenic Casino of Pamitha/Athens Mont Parnes Casino (15.3%) which is undergoing expansion (January 2011).
There are also significant real estate assets managed by subsidiary REDS. They include the Athens Exhibition Centre (11.7%), Kantza Mall (100%, budget at €300 million is the highest) and the Yialou Retail Park (100%) and the Piraeus Metropolitan Center (19.5%).
The company's consistent annual growth in revenue from 2005 to 2009 ended in 2010 when for the first time in half a decade Ellaktor recorded negative growth in sales (down 21.8% to €1.3 billion for the first nine months of the 2010 fiscal year). The drop in net profit (after minority interests) was even more pronounced (fell to €9 million from €72 million, net profit fell every year since 2007 when it amounted to €130 million). In 2010 net debt (€913 million euro) grew six times faster than total assets (23% compared to over 3%).[8] On February 2, 2014 Ellaktor had a market value of €6.8 billion[9]
Operations
Operations are conducted through eight direct subsidiaries, each involved in one of the group's six main areas of business. 34% of the company's project backlog is outside of Greece (total project backlog is €2.6 billion about half of its historic high in 2007 (€5 billion); about 37% comes from concessions, 21% from Infrastructure projects. Many of its development contracts come from concessions which the company competes for domestically and internationally (competitors are both domestic and foreign. Attiki Odos and Rio Antirrio (bridge) are two of the biggest concession projects the company has been involved in. In 2011 it won its third Doha airport related contract (€68 million deal). For 2010 solar power projects could contribute as much as €60 million in revenue.[9]
Concessions projects - motorways, bridges, parking lots, other (buildings). Subsidiaries are Aktor Concessions (100% owned); Aktor is involved in the Athens toll ring road and a major toll bridge in Greece.
Construction - Aktor (100% owned) and Hellenic Quarries (100% indirect ownership)
Environmental facilities - Ellaktor both builds and operates a variety of facilities most related to the generation of renewable energy. Involved in waste management, recycling, solar energy and wind power.[9]
- Waste Management - Hellector (80% owned), most business is in Greece and Cyprus. This business sector involves the construction of landfills (some biogas fired), recycling plants (public) as well as the management of leachate treatment plants. Hellector is the only producer of biogas in Greece and operates internationally in Germany (Herhof & Helector) and Bulgaria.
- Energy - renewable including biogas and alternative energy (wind, solar). Includes thermal electricity production (Elpedison Power, Elpedison is a joint venture between Ellaktor (24%), Italian energy company Edison (38%) and Hellenic Petroleum (38%). Subsidiaries include Ellinki Technomiki Anemos (84%), Elpedison Power (22.74%) and Biosar (wholly owned).
Real Estate - R.E.D.S (55.4%)
Renewable Energy - The group established itself in the alternative energy market in 2000 when it created Eltech Anemos. It is involved in photovoltaic and wind production (118 MW of capacity with another 116 MW being constructed).
Greek projects
Ellaktor's Greek projects are for the most part majority controlled (over 70% interest in most of the key ones though the largest, a transportation toll road connecting Patra and Tsakona (€522 million in backlog) involves participation of only 17% through Aktor).[10] Backlog comes mostly from transportation related developments followed by infrastructure projects (8, both public and private).[8]
Shareholders
In early 2011 Ellaktor's largest shareholders were Institutional Investors (total of 32.5% stake, 66% of that coming from foreign investors), the company's own management (37.3%), and retail investors (27.6%), the other 2.6% was from treasury stock.[8]
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Annual Report 2010" (PDF). Ellaktor. Retrieved 5 May 2011.
- ↑ http://www.ellaktor.gr/article.asp?catid=22194
- ↑ http://www.ellaktor.gr/article.asp?catid=22194
- ↑ Gemaco SA
- ↑ "Agenda:24 hr strike at the Athens metro and Piraeus electric railway". 2011-01-30.
- ↑ "A good find for Ellaktor". 2011-02-05.
- ↑ "Historic deal signed to build Oman's Blue City". 2007-01-07.
- 1 2 3 "Ellaktor 2010 Third Quarter Report Presentation" (PDF). January 2011.
- 1 2 3 "Mideast, solar deals attractive for Ellaktor". 2011-02-02.
- ↑ "Elefsina-Patras-Tsakona motorway, Greece". Retrieved 2011-02-05.