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Greece hopes for more cross-border mergers and acquisitions, finance minister says
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Greece hopes for more cross-border mergers and acquisitions, finance minister says
Oct 17, 2025 12:21 PM

WASHINGTON, Oct 17 (Reuters) - Europe needs a mindset

shift to ensure more cross-border mergers and acquisitions and

Greece hopes it can be at the center of some of them, the

country's finance minister said, singling out infrastructure as

a possible target sector.

Speaking on the sidelines of the International Monetary Fund

and World Bank annual meetings in Washington, Greece's Finance

Minister Kyriakos Pierrakakis said late on Thursday that more

action was needed to ensure Europe would be competitive.

"Throughout Europe, we need more cross-border M&A to achieve

the scale necessary in order to compete internationally," he

said, adding that there was a huge opportunity cost of not doing

so, which needed to be taken into account in every decision

policymakers in the bloc would take.

Pierrakakis said the government strongly supported Euronext's

bid for Hellenic Exchanges - Athens Stock Exchange

ahead of a mid-November deadline.

"It would offer the Athens Stock Exchange, and it would

offer the Greek economy access to a much broader liquidity pool,

which we believe in," Pierrakakis said, adding that he felt the

deal was part of a broader narrative.

Asked which sectors could see the biggest momentum for

mergers and acquisitions, he pointed to infrastructure as a core

area.

"But ... there are many interesting companies in Greece

which need to develop further synergies, either on the side of

them acquiring other companies in Europe and throughout the

world - or vice versa," he said.

Greece expects its economy to grow faster in 2026,

outperforming Europe's major economies, thanks to higher

investment and robust consumer spending, according to the

country's 2026 draft budget.

Part of that expected growth momentum is coming from

investments largely financed by the European Recovery Fund,

which is set to end in 2026.

Asked whether the end of the Fund could slow future growth,

Pierrakakis said he expected its specific projects will have

productivity spillover effects which would be felt for years. He

noted that private investment also is a driving force.

"The biggest challenge moving forward is how to increase

investment further," he said.

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