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Club Med board recommends Chinese firm Fosun's new bid
by Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) Oct 06, 2014


Chinese firm buys Hilton's Waldorf Astoria for $1.95 bn
New York (AFP) Oct 06, 2014 - A Chinese insurance company has bought Hilton's landmark New York luxury hotel the Waldorf Astoria for $1.95 billion, the US hotel giant said Monday.

Anbang Insurance Group has agreed "to restore the property to its historic grandeur" and will allow Hilton to manage the property for the next 100 years, Hilton Worldwide Holdings said.

The Waldorf Astoria New York, the grand Art Deco hotel on Park Avenue that occupies a full city block in midtown Manhattan, has been in business for more than a century.

In 1993, the hotel was declared an official New York City landmark, joining the Empire State Building and the Brooklyn Bridge.

Conrad Hilton, Hilton Worldwide's founder, who bought the management rights to the hotel in 1949, called it "the greatest of them all."

"We are very excited to be entering into this long-term relationship with Anbang, which will ensure that the Waldorf Astoria New York represents the brand's world-class standards for generations to come," said Christopher Nassetta, president and chief executive of Hilton Worldwide, in a statement.

Anbang is based in Beijing and has more than 30,000 employees. The insurer also owns Chengdu Rural Commercial Bank and Anbang Asset Management Company.

The glamorous 47-story hotel has been a magnet for world leaders, celebrities, including Marilyn Monroe who lived in a $1,000-per-week suite, and top entertainers such as Frank Sinatra and Ella Fitzgerald.

The State Department has long held a suite at the Waldorf for the US ambassador to the United Nations, a department spokeswoman confirmed Monday.

The New York hotel is the flagship of Hilton's luxury brand Waldorf Astoria Hotels & Resorts, launched in 2006, which now spans 27 destinations, including Beijing, Shanghai, Amsterdam and Dubai.

Nine additional Waldorf Astoria hotels are planned, with destinations such as Bali, Bangkok and Beverly Hills, the company said.

Hilton Worldwide said it would use the sale proceeds to buy additional hotel assets in the United States. The company did not provide details of its acquisition strategy.

Hilton has a portfolio of 11 global brands, with operations in 93 countries.

Hilton shares fell 0.5 percent, closing at $24.21 on the New York Stock Exchange.

The board of directors of French holiday firm Club Med on Monday unanimously recommended that shareholders accept an improved bid from Chinese conglomerate Fosun and its partners.

The board said it considered the Fosun offer the best deal financially, "conforming more with the interests of the company, its employees and it shareholders," Club Med said in a statement.

They unanimously approved the revised bid made via a vehicle called "Gaillon Invest II", in which Fosun has the main interest of 85.1 percent. Its French ally Ardian would hold 5.0 percent, Chinese travel company U-Tour 7.5 percent and Club Med executives 2.5 percent.

Fosun and its allies had made a counter-bid outflanking Italian businessman Andrea Bonomi by 4.8 percent, valuing Club Med at 839 million euros ($1.08 billion), they said last month.

Club Med, once famous for thatched-roofed, free-wheeling holiday villages which inspired a popular comedy film in France, is coveted for its potential to appeal to new middle classes in emerging economies.

In its early days, Club Med was associated very much with the French way of having fun, and was seen as a strong French brand. If shareholders approve the Fosun offer, the company will come under strong Chinese influence, but will retain a listing on the Euronext market in Paris.

Just before the board's vote on Monday Fosun had reiterated its pledge.

"The headquarters will remain in Paris and Fosun intends to maintain the listing on the Paris stock exchange," it said.

Fosun and its partners have said that they would boost Club Med's strategy of developing market shares in mature markets, notably in France, and in rapidly growing markets such as China, Brazil, Russia, and South East Asia.

Club Med first became a high-profile name in the European tourism industry because it offered holidays in somewhat hippy style villages where sports activities were included.

It has since moved up-market, weathered financial storms in the process, and is now looking for further expansion, including in China.

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