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Greece has been forced to sell its most important port to China

Apr 8, 2016, 21:03 IST

Mike Bird, Business Insider

China's state owned shipping firm, the China Ocean Shipping Company is investing nearly €1 billion to buy the biggest port in Greece, one of the most crucial parts of the country's economy.

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COSCO, as it is known has bought a 67% stake in the port of Piraeus for €368.5 million, and has also agreed, as part of the deal, to invest €500 million in improving facilities at Piraeus, just outside of Athens. Payments will be split between a 51% stake bought now, and another 16% which will transfer into COSCO's ownership in five years time.

The deal was signed in a ceremony at the port featuring Greek prime minister Alexis Tsipras and Cosco's chairman Xu Lirong on Friday afternoon.

In a statement, law firm Paul Hastings, one of the advisors on the deal said: "This marks one of the most high profile Greek privatizations of recent years and successful execution of the deal is a key part of the plan to turn Piraeus into a logistics hub for Chinese exports to Europe."

"Let the ship sail and bring the Golden Fleece," Xu Lirong said, after the deal was signed, according to Reuters.

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The sale of Piraeus to China is part of Greece's commitment to sell around €5 billion of assets as part of its third bailout deal with its Troika of creditors.

As a maritime nation, Greece's economy is heavily reliant on shipping, and the industry makes up more than 6% of the country's GDP. More than 7% of the Greek workforce is employed in shipping.

Piraeus Port's stock has been getting crushed of late, losing 26% of its value since late 2015, largely in part to the crashing cost of shipping globally. Investors have reacted well today however, and Piraeus' stock is up 2.6%. Here's how it looks since December:

Investing.com

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