Williams wins Lithuania deal, U.S. investors lose.
Published:
6 November 1999 y., Saturday
U.S. group Williams may have won the drawn-out battle to buy Lithuanian oil concern Mazheikiu Nafta, but American investors have lost public support and will need to work hard to regain confidence. Last week, Williams completed nearly two years of talks with the purchase of a 33 percent stake and operational control in Mazheikiu, a combined refinery, pipeline and crude terminal. But in the time it took to negotiate the deal, the public turned overwhelmingly against the company, seen by many locals as a cut-throat American firm that has taken advantage of the Baltic nation. Analysts and investors fear the chill in relations could harm future U.S. investment.
After 50 years of domination from Moscow, and with large neighbour Poland to the west, investors say the tiny nation is often wary or even distrustful of outside involvement. President Valdas Adamkus, a former American citizen, said he was disturbed by the ``anti-Western hysteria fuelled by opposition parties,'' but told Williams to take stock as well.
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
An aviation agreement has been signed today by the European Union and the Vietnamese authorities which will remove nationality restrictions in the bilateral air services agreements between EU Member States and Vietnam.
more »
The European Investment Bank marked the 50th anniversary of the Republic of Cyprus and its 30 years of activity in the country with a public ceremony celebrating the signature of a total of EUR 180 million for urban environment.
more »
In response to the financial crisis, the Commission has put forward legislative proposals to strengthen and expand existing tools for coordinating economic and fiscal policy in the EU.
more »
In the first meeting of the SME Finance Forum, possible means to improve the current situation of access to finance were discussed, such as the introduction of a grace period for firms in difficulties, the involvement of credit mediators and improved loan guarantees.
more »
The EU budget is no simple matter, but then no budget ever is.
more »
Parliament will be crucial in avoiding a “lowest common denominator” approach when helping to design the EU's new economic governance architecture, ECB president Jean-Claude Trichet told the Economic and Monetary Affairs Committee on Monday.
more »
With a multitude of language-related events taking place on or around 26 September, the main themes for this year's European Day of Languages are business and jobs.
more »
The EU disbursed today € 1.15 billion to Romania, the third instalment of a € 5 billion loan, which was agreed in May 2009 as part of a multilateral financial assistance package.
more »
The European Investment Bank has agreed to lend GBP250 million for the replacement, reinforcement and expansion of the gas distribution networks operated by Scotland Gas Networks and Southern Gas Networks.
more »
The bargaining positions of all players in the human food chain must be rebalanced, and fair competition enforced by law, to ensure fair returns to farmers and price transparency to consumers, says Parliament in a resolution voted on Tuesday.
more »