TENT in “a golden middle”

tent

Independent media for business information "See news" has published the list of 100 most successful companies in Southeast Europe in terms of turnover in 2013. On that list, there are 10 Serbian companies, including NIS, in ninth place (like last year), FAS (this year in 17th and last year on 88th place), EPS in 21st place (previously in 24th), Telekom Serbia in 38th position (previously in 39th), and for the first time on the list, in 47th place, there is a newly formed company EPS Snabdevanje (EPS Supply). CE "Thermal Power Plants Nikola Tesla" ltd. Obrenovac is in a "golden middle" position, i.e. 50th place. "Srbijagas" fell from 47th to 53rd position, while Delhaize Serbia climbed from 55th to 54th place. A slight decrease compared to last year's list has been recorded by Mercator S in 70th place (from 68) and "Idea" in 94th (from 89.)

In terms of revenue, Romanian "OMV Petrom" (for the seventh time) is in the first place, followed by vehicle manufacturer "Dacia", also from Romania. From the third to the seventh position there are mainly oil and gas companies - Lukoil Neftochim (Bulgaria) Petrol (Slovenia), OMV Petrom Marketing (Romania), INA (Croatia) and Rompetrol (Romania). In the eight place there is Bulgarian metal company Aurubis, and in tenth place- Romanian Roads Company.

Otherwise, on the list SEE TOP 100, which is published for the seventh year in a row, non-financial companies in Southeast Europe are ranked (Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Macedonia, Moldova, Montenegro, Romania, Serbia and Slovenia) according to total revenue for fiscal year 2013.

Information about their income, "See news" collected from the national commercial register, stock market, governments’ and compnies’ websites, from industry regulators and companies themselves, it is stated in the report. Total revenue of 100 largest non-financial companies in the region in 2013 generally stagnated at 103.98 billion EUR. Their net income decreased from 2.85 billion euros in 2012 to 2.26 billion in 2013.

(Friday, 3 October, 2014)