Das Qatari Angebot ist noch immer aktuell,eine Anwaltskanzlei und eine Geschäftsbank prüfen es aktuell für die SBM.Da das SBM Management es als ungenügend abgelehnt hat können die Berater ja nur zu einem wesentlich höheren Wert kommen.Da denke ich dass allein die Veröffentlichung schon für einen höheren Kurs sorgen sollte.Gut möglich dass Qatari den gewünschten % Anteil dann herunter u. den Angebotspreis heraufsetzt.
Ausserdem steht in diesem Quartal der 1:10 Stocksplit an,welcher für wesentlich mehr Liquidität sorgen wird. Clever wäre es den Report u. den Split zusammenzulegen ;-)))))))))))))))
UPDATE 1-Qatar's Diar eyes Europe investment after crunch
By Jason Benham and Ola Galal
DUBAI, Oct 6 (Reuters) - A unit of Qatar Investment Authority (QIA) said on Monday it was looking into investing in Europe, including buying London office blocks worth up to 500 million pounds ($878.4 million), as prices were expected to fall.
"We are looking at buying office blocks in London because they are always in demand ... we are looking at an investment of between 80 and 500 million British pounds," Ahmed al-Mazroei, deputy chief executive of Diar, told Reuters.
Mazroei said Diar, the property arm of Qatar's $40 billion sovereign fund QIA, was looking to benefit from an expected decline of 15-20 percent in the European real estate market in the coming two years, which he said would make prices "cheap" in view of the liquidity crisis.
Commercial real estate valuations in Britain are 22 percent down on average from their peaks in the summer of 2007.
In September QIA bought a 20 percent state in British property company Chelsfield Partners LLP.
QIA also holds stake in Britain's J Sainsbury of approximately 27 percent, a stake in the London Stock Exchange of 15 percent and a 6 percent holding in Barclays . Its property interests include a 15 percent stake in Songbird Estates .
Asked about an offer to increase Diar's stake in Monaco casino and hotel group Societe des Bains de Mer , Mazroei said: "The offer is still there ... the size of the Monaco deal is attractive."
Diar, which owns 2.45 percent of Societe des Bains de Mer, had said in July it was dropping its offer for a larger stake due to opposition from management, which it said would only support a 10 percent stake. Diar had offered earlier to buy Societe's entire floating stock for 400 million euros ($543.6 million).
Mazroei said the firm was also looking at opportunities in either China, Hong Kong, Vietnam or Cambodia. QIA has been one of the most aggressive sovereign wealth funds in recent years.
"We think that $500 million is reasonable to go into the development of major mixed-use developments in one of these countries," he said on the sidelines of a real estate fair in Dubai.
Mazroei also said that the firm could also look at opportunities in the United States in 2009. (Additional reporting by William Kemble-Diaz in London; writing by Firouz Sedarat; Editing by Paul Bolding)
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