Vivendi shares surge after spin-off of Canal+, Havas, and Louis Hachette By Investing.com
- Vivendi shares have surged after the spin-off of Canal+, as reported by Investing.com.
- Vivendi shares have also surged following the spin-off of Havas, according to Investing.com.
- Vivendi shares increased after the spin-off of Louis Hachette, as mentioned by Investing.com.
- The spin-off has generated considerable market interest and positive investor sentiment, according to Investing.com.
17 Articles
17 Articles
After the split, Vivendi satellites in orbit on the markets
The division of Vivendi gave birth to three entities listed in Paris, London and Amsterdam, with highly contrasting beginnings, marked by the fall of Canal+, the stability of Havas and the strong growth of Louis Hachette Group...
Canal+ Group CFO Amandine Ferré Reveals Ins and Outs of Pay TV Giant’s London Stock Exchange Debut: ‘It Opens Up Opportunities That We Didn’t Have Before’
French pay TV giant Canal+, which is behind “Paddington” producer Studiocanal, has officially split from parent company Vivendi in time for its 40-year anniversary. Making its debut solo on the London stock exchange on Monday, Canal+ enlisted a homegrown executive, Amandine Ferré — who has been at the company for 15 years and was most recently based in China — to “cut the cord” and engineer the IPO. Canal+ shares opened this morning at 290p an…
‘Paddington’ Producer Canal+ Shares Fall in London Debut After Vivendi Four-Way Split
The stocks of ad giant Havas and publisher Louis Hachette rose though following the split designed “to fully unleash the development potential of Vivendi’s different activities.”
Canal+, Havas, Hachette... The companies of the Vivendi empire take off on the stock market
DECRYPTION - The listing of these three entities, as well as that of Vivendi SE, starts on Monday in London, Amsterdam and Paris. The group hopes that this division into four will make it possible to increase the value of each of these activities in audiovisual, advertising or publishing.
Vivendi’s discount haunts Bollorés post-breakup
The media group split in four to shed a conglomerate valuation penalty. The bits are now collectively worth just 8 bln euros, implying no upside from the move. One lesson is that the discount was always down to the controlling Bolloré clan’s influence rather than the structure.
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