Greece, Egypt to Sign Deal on Subsea Power Link Plan

Cables. Mike Segar / Reuters
Cables. Mike Segar / Reuters
TT

Greece, Egypt to Sign Deal on Subsea Power Link Plan

Cables. Mike Segar / Reuters
Cables. Mike Segar / Reuters

Greece and Egypt are set to sign an agreement on Thursday on a plan to build an undersea cable linking their electricity grids, a Greek energy ministry official said.

Greece is keen to connect its power grid to Egypt, where the cost of energy from solar parks is low. A memorandum of understanding between the two countries will be signed in Athens, the official told Reuters on condition of anonymity.

The deal comes as Greece, Cyprus and Israel plan to build the Euro-Asia Interconnector, the world's longest and deepest underwater power cable crossing the Mediterranean at a cost of about $900 million.

This summer, Greece linked the island of Crete to the power grid of the Peloponnese peninsula via an undersea cable, a major step in the country's drive to cut its reliance on imported fossil fuel and boost its use of renewable energy.

Power grid operator IPTO will build a bigger 1 billion euro underwater power link that will connect Crete to the mainland grid by 2023. That project will be then linked to the planned Euro-Asia Interconnector.



Derayah Financial Joins Flurry of Saudi Firms Seeking a Listing

Derayah Financial Joins Flurry of Saudi Firms Seeking a Listing
TT

Derayah Financial Joins Flurry of Saudi Firms Seeking a Listing

Derayah Financial Joins Flurry of Saudi Firms Seeking a Listing

Saudi Arabia's Derayah Financial became the first firm to announce plans this year to float on Riyadh's main market, after it said on Thursday it was offering investors a 20% stake via an initial public offering (IPO).
The company is planning to sell 49.94 million existing shares in the IPO, it said in an intention to float document, adding the price for the offering will be determined at the end of a book-building period, without providing further details, Reuters said.
"I am excited to welcome new shareholders to join us on this journey as we continue to drive innovation, create value, and contribute to the Kingdom's ambitious economic transformation," co-founder and chairman Taha AlKuwaiz said in the document.
Founded in 2009, Derayah provides brokerage and trading services, as well as asset and wealth management solutions, with 15.1 billion riyals ($4.03 billion) in assets under management as of the end of June.
The possible listing is part of a flurry of IPOs in the Gulf driven in part by local governments' economic diversification strategy and listings by private groups and family businesses.
Saudi Arabia's red-hot IPO market saw a number of financial services firms including Rasan Information Technology and Yaqeen Capital make their market debut last year.
Others like the investment banking arm of one of the Kingdom's biggest lenders, Riyad Bank, could follow suit this year.
Derayah posted a net profit of 228 million riyals ($60.80 million) in the first half of 2024, up 70% from the same period a year earlier, it said on Thursday.
It appointed HSBC Saudi Arabia as sole financial adviser, bookrunner, global coordinator, lead manager and underwriter for the IPO.