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Israeli cash still fancies Europe

As investors eye up emerging economies, Europe is still an attractive place to raise cash.

March 4, 2010 11:27
Haggai Ravid

ByCandice Krieger, Candice Krieger

3 min read

Europe has fallen out of favour with financiers as they fret over the possibility of a European debt crisis emerging from the continuing turmoil in Greece. But according to Edouard Cukierman and Haggai Ravid, experts on investing in the region, it is still a fruitful place to raise money.

Mr Cukierman, 44, and Mr Ravid, 49, directors at Israel's leading investment house Cukierman & Co, have been key players in the flotation of 45 Israeli firms on European markets. They have facilitated close to €3bn worth of transactions since the company was founded 13 years ago - 66 per cent of these have been Europe-related - and they don't see this proportion changing.

French-born Mr Cukierman says: "We will still be very much focused on Europe. Eventually there will be more money raised in Europe than in the US. That is the trend."

According to Mr Ravid, the managing partner of Cukierman & Co's investment banking activities, things are "heating up" for floating big companies on European markets. The Israeli says: "In spite of what everyone is saying, we think that Europe is still a good place for companies to raise money in and do business in. It's not a surprise that Chinese and Indian companies are still looking at European exchanges - despite new endeavours to create their own capital markets."