Minoan Flying Dolphins

Founded 1998
Founder Pantelis Sfinias
Defunct 2001
Headquarters Piraeus, Greece
Area served
Greece, Aegean Sea
Services Passenger transportation
Freight transportation

Minoan Flying Dolphins (MFD) was a Greek passenger and freight ferry company.

History

MFD was established in 1998 by Pantelis Sfinias (Greek: Παντελής Σφηνιάς) as a subsidiary of Minoan Lines. Sfinias had convinced many prominent Greek businessmen to purchase stakes in MFD. His plan was to use the raised capital for purchasing small traditional ferry companies and eventually consolidate the Greek ferry industry.[1] MFD's first acquisition was Ceres Flying Dolphins owned by the Livanos family, a hydrofoils company active in the Argo-Saronic Gulf and the Sporades islands. Within a few months, MFD grew rapidly through a barrage of buyouts that targeted companies such as Agapitos, Agoudimos, Nomikos, Ventouris, Goutos, etc.[2] Soon, MFD controlled a market share exceeding 90% in several routes.[3] In addition to its fleet of conventional vessels, MFD operated a number of high-speed craft ordered from Austal, Australia.[4]

However, plans of taking the company public collapsed after the Greek stock market crash in the fall of 1999 and the sinking of MFD's MS Express Samina on 26 September 2000, in which 81 people perished. Two months later, under strong pressure from the stockholders and the media, Sfinias committed suicide by throwing himself out of his sixth floor office window.[5]

MFD was renamed to Hellas Flying Dolphins in the summer of 2001 and finally to Hellenic Seaways in 2005.

See also

References

  1. "Ο άνθρωπος που θα γινόταν βασιλιάς". To Vima.
  2. "Flying Dolphins News". MarineLink.
  3. "Πώς στήθηκε το μονοπώλιο της Μinoan στο Αιγαίο". Ta Nea.
  4. "A highspeed jetty". Austal.
  5. "Φάκελος Ναυτιλιακές: Το παρασκήνιο της αυτοκτονίας του Παντελή Σφηνιά". SofokleousIn.


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