The crisis at Italian agri-food giant Parmalat, described by Economy Minister Giulio Tremonti as "Europe's Enron", sent shockwaves through Italian industry
Published:
21 December 2003 y., Sunday
"The situation is very serious," Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi said, announcing his government would intervene to try to salvage the agri-food giant "to restore confidence and the country's reputation".
The scandal, sparked by the discovery of a four billion-euro "hole" in its accounts, follows the recent spectacular collapse of another high-profile Italian food company, Cirio.
"The government will intervene above all to save the company and its industrial sector and to save the jobs...." Berlusconi told an end-of-year press conference in Rome.
He said Tremonti, whose "Enron" remark was reportedly made at a cabinet meeting which discussed the crisis on Friday, would submit rescue proposals to a cabinet meeting on Tuesday.
Parmalat, Italy's leading agri-food company with a workforce of more than 36,000 in 30 countries, was already struggling to cover estimated debts of 6.0 billion euros when the hole was discovered.
The Bank of America (BoA) disowned the authenticity of a document certifying that Parmalat's Cayman unit Bonlat Financing Corporation had 3.950 billion euros (4.9 billion dollars) of liquidity at December 31, 2002.
Analysts said Friday Parmalat was close to declaring bankruptcy after the discovery of the massive hole in the company's accounts. affected" by the crisis, Berlusconi said.
Šaltinis:
AFP
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Wincor Nixdorf AG closed the first six months of fiscal year 2008/2009 with a 4 percent increase in net sales and a 2 percent increase in operating profit (EBITA).
more »
Raiffeisen Bank Polska SA, a subsidiary of Raiffeisen International, a leading financial corporation in Central and Eastern Europe, has deployed "VIP Mobile," a next-generation mobile banking solution.
more »
Commission calls for help with reforming EU fishing.
more »
IFC, a member of the World Bank Group, and SEB Bank today launched an innovative transaction that will support lending of around €50 million to help small and medium enterprises in Lithuania switch to renewable sources of energy.
more »
Is your money well spent at EU level? Every year, in April, the EP concludes its examination of EU spending for the financial year closed 16 months previously.
more »
The right to compensation for poor service, the right to change gas and electricity suppliers and comparable prices are just three aspects of the proposed “third energy package” being debated today by MEPs.
more »
As access to ATMs became free from April 1, many banks are expected to consider consolidating their teller operations instead of aggressively expanding ATM network.
more »
Crisis or no crisis, secure identity cards will still be needed to cross borders…
more »
A fund-raising initiative has been launched among 170,000 employees in all 22 countries where the Group operates
more »
This year AB Bank SNORAS also joined the promotional event "Praise excellent service!" which is held in March every year.
more »