Inside Bulgaria’s Economic Hubs: What and Where the Country Produces Most
Bulgaria’s economic landscape is shaped by 16 major centers that concentrate 80% of the country’s economic activity and three-quarters of the population,
Turk Telekom said in a statement to Istanbul Stock Exchange that the bids were placed as part of the company's plans for regional expansion. Photo by turktelekom.com.tr
Turkey's telecoms company Turk Telekom said on Wednesday it had submitted non-binding bids to buy Bulgarian mobile operator Globul and the electronic appliance retail chain Germanos, put up for sale by the owner, Greece's OTE.
Turk Telekom said in a statement to Istanbul Stock Exchange that the bids were placed as part of the company's plans for regional expansion.
A day earlier Turkey's largest mobile phone operator Turkcell said it had placed a non-binding preliminary bid to buy Bulgarian mobile operator Globul.
The Istanbul-based company, in a statement to the Istanbul Stock Exchange, said it placed the bid as it explores investment opportunities in the region.
Turkcell is Turkey's biggest mobile operator, serving 35m subscribers there and another 30m through subsidiaries and minority stakes in other countries. But the company has been struggling this year with shareholder wrangling.
The country's second richest man, Mehmet Emin Karamehmet, is fighting to keep control of the firm he co-founded. His Cukurova Holding, a family-owned group, is pitted against Turkcell's two other big shareholders, TeliaSonera, a Nordic telecoms operator, and Altimo, a subsidiary of Alfa Group, a large Russian investment firm.
The firm's two competitors on the Turkish market are Vodafone and Avea, which is controlled by Turk Telekom, the incumbent fixed-line giant.
Turk Telekom was bought in 2005 by Saudi Oger, a group founded by Rafik Hariri, a Lebanese prime minister who was assassinated in 2005.
Globul, Bulgaria's second-biggest mobile operator, reported earlier this month a sharp decline in revenues in a worrying sign about the future deal.
The revenues of telecoms operator Globul have dropped 20.9% in the third quarter of the year on an annual basis to EUR 85.9 M, data shows.
OTE, the biggest telecoms operator in southeastern Europe, announced in mid-June it plans to sell its Bulgarian units to help refinance EUR 3.4 B debt maturing in the next two years.
According to unconfirmed reports, OTE has hired the London unit of US Citigroup as a consultant for the sale.
Greek telecoms group OTE will seek to sell its Bulgarian businesses - a mobile phone company and an electronic appliance retail chain Germanos - for no less than EUR 800 M, according to reports.
Deutsche Telekom, which controls a 40% stake in OTE, Turkish Turkcell, British Vodafone and Orange, owned by France Telekom, have been listed as potential buyers.
Globul is the trademark under which Cosmo Bulgaria Mobile EAD offers mobile telecommunications services in Bulgaria.
The company is 100% owned by Cosmote, OTE's mobile phone arm.
It unites independent research, corporate studies on innovative products, and global examples of tobacco harm reduction
Economist Georgi Ganev has warned that Bulgaria’s forthcoming budget is likely to leave the country poorer than it could be, emphasizing that the process lacks genuine dialogue
Bulgaria stands at a pivotal moment in its energy strategy, with the potential to become a major energy exporter if it navigates its geopolitical and domestic energy policies effectively
Bulgaria has overtaken both Greece and Romania in terms of purchasing power
From January 1, 2026, Bulgaria will officially become part of the eurozone, and the Bulgarian National Bank (BNB) will join the Eurosystem's joint production pool for euro banknotes
Bulgaria and Lebanon have agreed to establish a regular air route connecting Sofia and Beirut
Bulgaria's Strategic Role in the EU's Drone Wall Defense Initiative
When Politics Means Violence