Strona Domowa O nas/usługi Powiązania Informacje z PrzemysłuEU/ERBD InfoKontakt
* CeeIndustrial - ''The leading Industrial Portal dedicated to Central and Eastern Europe'' ... 2008 set to be record year for industrial machinery into Central and Eastern Europe ... House prices rose fastest in Poland in 2007 ... ....Toshiba opens new LCD production plant in Poland ... CEE region set for $42Bn electronics output in 2007 ... High demand for machinery in Eastern Europe ...... Lenovo to open big Polish PC factory ... Citroen Auto Village Inaugurated near Bozhurisht ... Deloitte's Fast 50 finds CEE tech startups persevere … Mentor faring well amid fight for Hungary's talent … Study finds CEE IT outsourcing worth $3B … Hungary targets solar and semiconductor investments … Companies can't find enough skilled workers in Romania … Investment: Driven by a reservoir of cheap labour … Cobra back in UK from Poland … Poland shows the strain … PolyOne: Colour manufacturing plant opened in Poland … Sony expands Eastern Europe distribution network … Russia to co-develop laptop fuel cells … Sitronics takes $234M loss, but chip unit shines ... Bosch increases investment in Poland operations …. Amcor Flexibles announces EUR25m investment in Lodz … Schaffner moves last of production from Western Europe to Hungary … ARCADIS Expands Position in Polish Rail Infrastructure Market … AHI Roofing starts Ft 4 billion plant in Hungary … More IT operations open in Poland … Gazprom voices concern over South Stream Serb section delay … Dell to double production capacity at Poland plant … India's Wipro to set up in Wroclaw … Romania's growth is double-edged sword … LUKoil could buy Regal Petroleum’s gas assets in Ukraine – paper … Fazer to build new Russian bakery … Analysts see Hungary farm sector expanding 10-15% in 2008 … Eastern Europe drawing pharma investment … CEE a major focus for logistics growth … Arte Brotto to expand its Hungarian production base… Huge road investments in next five years … Poland's FDI soars; concerns on horizon … Kimball shifts Irish manufacturing to Poland … Cheap car trend pushes development to Eastern Europe … IBM manages Brno expansion despite labor shortage … Johnson Controls findacedonia …Electronics expansions for euro-bound Slovakia s engineering pool in Macedonia ... Germany’s Messer invests €300 mln in CE ... Total studies an LNG receiving terminal in Croatia ... Austrian voestalpine AG to build Steel Service Center in Romania ... ... Nature-identical still rules for CEE flavours …Roquette strengthens Russian presence with subsidiary… Czech market ripe for high quality cheeses – expert … Wincanton strengthens position in Hungary … Russia could become top grain exporter, says Minister … ... BYD Electronic may raise $989 million in IPO ... Czechs could adopt euro in 2012 … ... Housings plant to be built in Slovakia ... Slovenian Railways orders Siemens locomotives ... Imperial Energy could hold IPO of its Russian subsidiary ... Exec says Nabucco expects to transport gas from Russia ... BYD buys Hungarian Mirae asset ... New Renewable Energy Centre in Olsztyn ... Lumson targets Poland ... CEDC to acquire Parliament ... P+G to invest USD450m in Poland ... Eurocash becomes Poland’s largest FMGC wholesaler ... SABMiller subsidiary wraps up Browar Belgia acquistion ... SA paper giant eyes Russia's softwood treasure trove ... BULGARIA: Nabucco Is Strategic for Both Bulgaria and EU ... ROMANIA: Starting February, Subway Tariffs Will Rise 8.75 pc ... ROMANIA: Porsche Romania Sold Over 200 000 Vehicles in 10 Years ... BULGARIA: Mayr-Melnhof Opens New Line at Nikopol Factory ... BULGARIA: Bulgarian-German JV to Build Profiles Plant in Pleven ... ROMANIA: EC Asks Higher Car Registration Charge for Polluting Vehicles ... Czech design venture produces first IC and system ... Russia launches final satellites for its own GPS ... Intel plans WiMax network for Moscow ... Drinks manufacturers turn to emerging markets ... VW due to open new plant in Russia ... CeeIndustrial - ''The leading Industrial Portal dedicated to the Emerging market of Central and Eastern Europe"" ... GE criticizing changes in Hungary’s tax policy
ABCDEFG
HIJKLMN
OPQRSTU
VWXYZ0-9
Wyszukaj:
C.Europe economies dynamic, but problems loom
2007-10-18 00:00:00
VIENNA - Central Europe has evolved from a collection of Soviet Communist satellite states into the most dynamic part of the capitalist European Union in less than a generation.

While dwarfed by neighbor Russia and by China and India, its countries now combine the vibrant economic growth of an emerging market with the political stability and legal certainty that come with joining the EU.

But as growth accelerated since central European countries became EU members in 2004, it has driven up wages and prices; a credit boom may have fanned a housing bubble; the adoption of the euro currency is slipping; and current account deficits have ballooned, making doomsayers predict an inevitable collapse.

Problems in the U.S. housing and mortgage sector have also led to signs of a bubble in emerging markets, into which investors have stampeded in recent weeks, driving stock markets to record levels.

More than a dozen top executives and policy makers will discuss how to succeed in a region sometimes overlooked by investors focused on bigger emerging markets at the first Reuters Central European Investment Summit in Vienna, from October 15-17, in a series of exclusive interviews.

"We still see a lot of opportunities in central Europe," said Andras Szalkai, a Stockholm-based portfolio manager at East Capital's Eastern Europe fund.

"Yes, growth opportunities may not be as big as in some other emerging markets but at the same time the risk-adjusted growth is still maybe the best and definitely worth looking at."

IMBALANCES UNWINDING?

The Summit comes at a time when major markets have been shaken by a credit squeeze sparked by a crisis in the U.S. subprime mortgage sector.

Eastern Europe has so far sidestepped most of the turbulence caused by the credit crunch, but several countries with large external balances remain vulnerable to a halt in financing flows, the World Bank said last month.

With substantial current account gaps and a reliance on bank-related inflows for financing, Baltic and Balkan countries, as well as Hungary, are at particular risk, given concerns that credit booms have fuelled a deterioration in credit quality.

The pinch might be felt first and hardest by banks active in the region, which include UniCredit's Vienna-based arm Bank Austria, Raiffeisen International and Hungary's OTP Bank. Executives from all three will be speaking at the Reuters Summit.

"We are not seeing any problems with credit quality while things are going well. But if those countries are going into a hard landing we may see that," said Lars Christensen, an emerging markets analyst at Danske Bank.

Some east Europe bears also point to signs of froth in the region's property market, a target of Austrian investors including Immoeast and Warimpex. Both will speak at the Summit.

INFLATION RISING

Price pressures have not been limited to the property market.

While inflation fell as economic adjustment took place in Eastern Europe, upward pressure is becoming evident and in some countries inflation is at a level where it is beginning to threaten stability.

Supply-side factors such as strong domestic wage pressures and higher energy and food prices have fuelled the trend and many new EU members appear far from being able to meet the euro entry criteria on inflation.

Only Slovakia is aiming to adopt the single currency by the end of the decade. Other countries have seen the timetable slip into the next decade. Central bankers from Slovakia, the Czech Republic and Poland will all speak at the Reuters Summit.

Public spending is also making euro adoption difficult, despite strong economic growth. Governments in the region have been broadly criticized for failing to take the opportunity to restructure spending

"These countries need to run fiscal surpluses, scale back large-scale capital investment projects, keep wage growth in line with productivity, and use EU funds judiciously," Christoph Rosenberg, the IMF's senior regional representative who will speak at the Summit, recently told Reuters.

"Otherwise, they risk pouring oil into an already overheating economy."

While credit markets are in turmoil, the region's equity markets have been rising steadily.

Privatizations have given way to initial public offerings. Shares of energy firms, banks and telecoms have become market anchors while the stock markets in Prague, Budapest and Warsaw have posted double digit growth this year.
Strona Domowa O nas/usługi Powiązania Informacje z PrzemysłuEU/ERBD InfoKontakt
<