24 Gulf Daily News Thursday, 26th March 2015 Cineco shareholders approve 50 per cent cash dividend AD with new qrcode 21x2col malls&retailshop.pdf 4 10/29/14 3:01 PM n Cineco board members addressing shareholders By AVINASH SAXENA MANAMA: The shareholders of Bahrain Cinema Company (Cineco) have approved cash dividend equal to 50 per cent of the paid up capital, which is 50 fils per share. They have also approved the allocation of BD19,787,352 to retained profits and the transfer of BD550,823 from the company’s net profit to the statutory reserve. This follows a joint annual and extraordinary general meeting held at Cineco Megaplex in City Centre Bahrain yesterday. The meeting saw shareholders agreeing to make amendments to the Article of Association of the company for the purpose of adding activities – to buy and sell investment property for business and charitable activities and to undertake outdoor catering services to its Commercial Registration Licence and to make an amendment to the Articles of Association of the subsidiary company. The meeting also approved the amendments of the Company’s Article of Association as per the Law No 50 for the year 2014 amending the Commercial Companies Law No 21 for the year 2001. Bahrain Cinema Company chairman Esam Abdulla Fakhro said the company ended last year with sound results, which it hopes to build on this year. “We have reported a rise of 20pc in net profit as compared to the previous year. There are ambitious growth plans for the years ahead; we are planning to introduce new cinemas in Qatar and also a new restaurant in Qatar at the Gulf Mall Qatar which will be open to the public towards the beginning of the third quarter,” he said. Cineco chief executive Ahmed Rashid said the company’s growth over the past 13 years led to exceptional performance in market capitalisation with share values increasing by 1,300pc, which translates to an increase of 100pc every year for the last 13 years. The company’s operations include the management of a large number of cinemas and restaurants within Bahrain and the GCC. It now owns and operates a total of 44 cinema screens in Bahrain, and 27 screens in Qatar. [email protected] Kraft-Heinz to merge in Buffett-backed deal NEW YORK: Heinz and Kraft yesterday said they would merge to create North America’s third-largest food and beverage company, in a deal backed by Brazil’s 3G Capital and investment guru Warren Buffett. The combination of HJ Heinz Company and Kraft Foods Group will bring together a wide portfolio of well-known brands and benefit from Heinz’s international platform, the companies said. Buffet’s Berkshire Hathaway and 3G, Heinz’s owners, will have a 51 per cent stake in the combined firm, to be called The Kraft Heinz Company, with a 49pc stake to be held by Kraft’s existing shareholders. The proposed company would have revenues of about $28 billion a year. Berkshire and 3G will invest an additional $10bn to pay for a special cash dividend of $16.50 per share for Kraft shareholders. The deal has been unanimously n Commemorative ketchup bottles with portraits of Buffett approved by the companies’ are seen at the exhibition of Berkshire Hathaway companies boards of directors. at the annual meeting in Omaha “This is my kind of transaction, uniting two world-class organisations ucts and Weight Watchers packaged foods. and delivering shareholder value,” Buffett Kraft’s portfolio includes Kraft Macaroni & said in a statement. Cheese, Maxwell House coffee and Oscar The new company will have eight bil- Mayer hot dogs. lion-dollar brands and five others worth more Alex Behring, chairman of Heinz and the than $500 million in sales. Heinz’s brands managing partner at 3G Capital, will become include Heinz Ketchup, Ora-Ida potato prod- chairman of the merged company. Qatar eases Gulf investment limits DUBAI: Qatar’s stock exchange will treat investors from GCC countries as local citizens from today when calculating whether foreign ownership in listed companies has reached permissible limits, the bourse said yesterday. The move will in effect allow foreign investors, from both the Gulf and outside the region, to hold bigger stakes in listed Qatari companies, most of which have ceilings on total foreign ownership of 25 or 49 per cent.
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