Casino Rallye News
It is France's second-biggest supermarket operator and, having traded for the last 121 years, a familiar sight in most of the country's towns and cities.
Groupe Casino pioneered France's first own-brand labels, its first self-service supermarkets and its first supermarket cafeteria. Its sports and social club even evolved into AS Saint-Etienne, one of France's most famous football clubs, whose stadium bears the name of the company founder Geoffroy Guichard.
Big-name conservatives rally against Nebraska casino measure By GRANT SCHULTE October 5, 2020 GMT LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Some of the biggest conservative names in Nebraska politics lined up Monday against ballot measures to legalize casinos, which they argue would fuel an increase in gambling addictions and related social problems. Casino has already cancelled its interim dividend and has pledged to accelerate asset sales in a bid to reduce debt. Casino's net debt stood at 2.708 billion euros and that of Rallye at 2.899 billion euros at the end of 2018. (Reporting by Dominique Vidalon, additional reporting by Pascale Denis; editing by David Evans).
Yet the company, which employs more than 225,000 people around the world, is going through a tough time. Its parent has had to seek bankruptcy protection while shares of Casino itself have fallen by a third since the beginning of March. The stock has been, for several years, the most 'shorted' on the French stock market, which is to say, investors have been betting on further price falls.
So how did Casino get into this mess?
The main problem is the complex - and heavily indebted - company structure in which Casino sits. This was the creation of Jean-Charles Naouri, the 70-year-old chairman and chief executive of Casino, one of France's richest men, who is regularly described as the 'godfather of French retail'.
Mr Naouri, the Algerian-born son of a doctor and a schoolteacher, has for more than three decades been one of the country's best-connected individuals.
He was marked out for greatness at an early age, first attending the prestigious Ecole Normale Superieure, a higher education establishment whose alumni include the legendary microbiologist Louis Pasteur. He followed this by attending the equally-prestigious Ecole Normale d'Administration, where no fewer than four French presidents studied, including Emmanuel Macron, along with scores of France's leading business people.
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On graduating, Mr Naouri began his career in the finance ministry, working for Pierre Beregovoy, who went on to become prime minister. He then moved to the private sector with Banque Rothschild before, in 1987, setting up an investment fund called Euris.
The business accumulated shareholdings in a number of leading companies and made a name for itself in a number of big takeover battles in France and beyond. These included one of the first instances in Britain of a so-called 'leveraged buy-out', a takeover funded largely with borrowed money, backing the Isosceles consortium in its £2.2billion debt-fuelled takeover in 1989 of the Gateway supermarket chain.
This troublesome experience - Isosceles, which came close to collapse, remains a dirty word to those still working in the City who remember it - did not put off Mr Naouri from grocery retailing. In 1992, he engineered a merger between the Britanny-based supermarket operator Rallye with Casino, in which the descendents of Mr Guichard owned a near-27% shareholding. The deal created the second-largest food retailer in France after Carrefour. Over time, Mr Naouri was able to consolidate his grip over the company by, for example, selling it various property assets owned by Foncière Euris in exchange for shares in the business.
He also helped steer Casino's takeover in 1997 of the Franprix convenience store chain and the Leader Price discount format and, following a bid for Casino from the rival Promodes chain that year, took control of the business by successfully posing as a 'white knight'. He became chief executive of Casino in 2005 after unceremoniously ousting his predecessor, Pierre Bouchut, building it into a global company whose operations also span Brazil, Vietnam and Colombia.
The upshot of all this company-building, though, has been a hideously complicated corporate structure. Casino is 51.7% owned by Rallye, which is itself 61.2% owned by Foncière Euris, another quoted company. It in turn is 89% owned by Euris, opera-loving Mr Naouri's original fund, beyond which sits Finatis, another quoted company controlled by Mr Naouri.
And with this structure has come problems. They began when, at the end of 2015, a US firm called Muddy Waters, which specialises in highlighting the difficulties of companies whose shares it regards as ripe for short-selling, published a report in which it accused Casino of financial engineering. It led investors to liken Casino's company structure to that of a wedding cake.
The problem was that each layer of the cake was not only indebted but was required to continue paying dividends to help the layer above service its own debts. So, for example, Rallye became dependent on dividends from Casino but, in turn, needed to pay dividends itself to support Foncière Euris higher up the cake.
Mr Naouri fought off the doubters in 2016 by raising more than €4bn by selling Casino's assets in Thailand and Vietnam.
However, by the middle of last year, Casino was not only facing financial headaches. As in the UK, competition in the French grocery sector has intensified, with established domestic players like Casino, E Leclerc and Carrefour having to focus more on discount brands to take on the 'limited assortment' German operators Lidl and Aldi.
Casino Rallye News 2014
There has also, as with Britain, been a move away 'big box' hypermarket-style stores towards local and convenience formats. Nor have the likes of Carrefour or Casino been able to compete, as their British peers have, by taking a hit to their margins and selling some items at a loss to attract shoppers.
The French Ministry of Agriculture has just introduced new rules more or less banning 'buy one get one free' style offers and imposing a minimum 10% profit margin on all items of food and drink which prevent the grocery multiples from selling items at close to or below cost price. The idea was that, while shoppers would pay more for their groceries, the extra money would find its way to France's hard-pressed farmers.
That intensification of competition in the French grocery sector has renewed doubts about Casino's health and, last year, sparked a 30%+ fall in Casino's shares. Because some of those shares had been pledged as collateral for loans made to other companies in the wedding cake, it started to raise concerns about the ability of those companies to refinance their debts when they fell due. Those debts currently stand at around €2.7bn for Casino and a further €2.9bn at Rallye.
Mr Naouri is fighting back. Obtaining bankruptcy protection for Rallye last week bought him six months to carry out a restructuring. The first impact of that was felt today when Casino decided against paying a half-year dividend to shareholders in order to conserve cash.
But the ultimate outcome for Casino - whose debt is now rated deep in 'junk' territory - looks like involving finding a buyer for Rallye's stake in the business - e-commerce giants Amazon and Alibaba have both been mentioned - or for creditors to convert part of their debt into new shares in the business. Either eventuality would, in all likelihood, bring to an end Mr Naouri's control of this venerable old business.
One of the world’s largest wooden buildings, Turkey’s Prinkipo Orphanage, could be rescued from rot and decay and transformed into an environmental research center, reports Ayla Jean Yackley for the Art Newspaper.
Heritage organization Europa Nostra lists the 122-year-old building as one of the continent’s most threatened cultural sites. Located on the Princes’ Islands off the coast of Istanbul in the Mediterranean Sea, it was originally intended to act as a luxury hotel and casino. Per Atlas Obscura, architect Alexander Vallaury designed the venue in 1898 on behalf of the Compagnie Internationale des Wagons-Lits, the train company that operated the Orient Express. But plans to open the business fell apart when Abdul Hamid II, sultan of the Ottoman Empire, forbade gambling on religious grounds and prevented the casino from opening.
In 1903, the wife of a rich banker bought the unused building and donated it to the Eastern Orthodox Church’s Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople, which, in turn, turned the space into an orphanage. The 215,000-square-foot building housed up to 1,000 boys at a time, serving almost 6,000 in total over the next 60 years. In 1964, the orphanage was forced to close due to mounting tensions between Turkey and Greece.
The property’s physical structure has been in decline ever since. As Despina Karpathiou reports for Greek City Times, it was badly damaged in a 1980 fire; in 1997, the Turkish state seized the property, but 13 years later, the European Court of Human Rights ordered its return to the Ecumenical Patriarchate.
The enormous six-story building, sometimes known as the Büyükada Rum Orphanage Istanbul, features about 220 rooms, including a ballroom with balconies and boxes, elaborately carved wooden columns, and decorative paneled ceilings. Depending on how terms are defined, it competes with the Metropol Parasol in Spain for the title of the largest wooden building in Europe. Today, sections of the structure’s roof have caved in, and rain has destroyed some of its floors.
“You cannot find another timber structure built with these techniques on this scale from that period still standing, which makes this building so significant,” Burcin Altinsay, chair of Europa Nostra Turkey, tells the Art Newspaper.
Writing for Hurriyet Daily News, Ariana Ferentinou describes seeing the devastated state of the once-grand building when she visited it in 2018.
“The last schoolteacher who saw the closure of the school and the orphanage in 1964 had difficulty in holding his tears while trying to describe to me the joy of teaching in these exquisite surroundings,” she writes.
Last year, Europa Nostra and the European Investment Bank Institute issued a report detailing damage to the building, as well as the work needed to rehabilitate it and its cultural value.
“The Orphanage is of significance to the mythology of the island and holds a special place in the shared memory of the local communities, especially in the minds of the Rum (Greek) community of İstanbul,” the report stated.
Per the findings, the cost of stopping the building’s deterioration and restoring it to safe conditions would be almost €2 million ($2.4 million). The report estimated the minimum cost of fully rehabilitating the structure at €40 million and predicted that it would take four to five years to complete the project.
Casino Rallye News 2014
The report suggested that the building be reconfigured as an “Environmental and Inter-faith Dialogue Centre, free from any political agenda.” But it also acknowledged that other uses might be desirable and could help generate revenue to make the project financially viable.
As the site’s owner, the Patriarchate, is responsible for raising the money and organizing the project. Since the report’s publication, the group has been working with other interested parties to develop a plan. Representative Laki Vingas tells the Art Newspaper that the effort will depend on the success of a fundraising effort planned for next year. Assuming it is successful, the project could move forward in 2022.
“The orphanage has had a painful history,” Vingas says. “But it is part of Istanbul’s legacy, and our community has a responsibility to safeguard it. We cannot lose this building, and so we will find a way to keep it alive.”