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Italian businessman bids to buy Club Med

Shares in holiday group Club Med surged on Tuesday, after Italian businessman Andrea Bonomi launched a counter offer, outbidding terms proposed by Chinese company Fosun and French firm Ardian.

Italian businessman bids to buy Club Med
Andrea Bonomi gradually built up an interest of ten-percent in the Club Mediterranee, and then made his move overnight. Photo: Club Med

The new offer made late on Monday, ends several months of suspense over Bonomi's intentions.

He is offering significantly better terms than the Fosun-Ardian bid which is backed by the club's management.

Bonomi is offering €21.0 per share compared with €17.50, and €22.41 per share for each bond which may be converted into shares, compared with €19.79.

Trading in shares in Club Med had been suspended on Monday after the stock had risen by 2.74 percent to €19.51. When trading was resumed early in the afternoon on Tuesday, the shares gained 10.10 percent to €21.48, slightly above the price in the latest offer.

Analysts at brokers Gilbert Dupont said commented that Fosun-Ardian might raise the terms of their offer, but said that the terms offered by Bonomi appeared "attractive".

The new bid was put formally before the French stock market authority AMF by Global Resorts SAS which is owned by Bonomi's company Investindustrial.

Fosun and Ardian launched their offer a year ago but it ran into opposition from some shareholders who said it was pitched too low, since the shares were then worth about €19.0.

That first offer valued the company at about €550 million.

Bonomi gradually built up an interest of ten-percent in the Club Mediterranee, and then made his move overnight.

The company Gaillon Invest, which is the vehicle for Fosun and Ardian, said that it had taken note of the counter offer which it would study once it had access to the official proposal.

An investment fund which owns shares in the club, called CIAM, and which had made a legal challenge to the Fosun-Ardian bid, welcomed the move by Bonomi.

SEE ALSO: Club Med takeover facing Italian rival

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MAYOR

Rome mayor reticent on 2024 Olympic bid

Rome mayor Virginia Raggi remains reticent on her city's bid to host the 2024 Olympics, saying that it would be better to first think about "abandoned municipal installations".

Rome mayor reticent on 2024 Olympic bid
Rome Mayor Virginia Raggi argues that the Olympics are not a priority for the capital. Photo: Filippo Monteforte/AFP

Speaking on Monday during a visit of the Italian Paralympic delegation preparing to take part in the September 7th-18th Rio Games, Raggi said: “In September, after the summer, we'll tell Gianni Malago (co-president of the candidacy committee) what we think about Rome 2024.

“Let's first think about abandoned municipal installations and sport in schools,” she added in comments reported by La Gazzetta dello Sport.

“It's starting with these installations that we must begin to rebuild sport. The Olympic Games are a great sporting moment, but one is not born Olympic, one becomes it.”

Raggi was elected mayor in June, continually repeating in her campaign that the Games were not a priority for the Italian capital.

Rome is one of four candidates to host the Olympics in 2024 along with Paris, Budapest and Los Angeles. The quartet must submit the second part of their candidacy by October 7th.

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