Enache Jiru, the head of the selection commission, told MEDIAFAX that further  details would be announced after the contract is approved by the fund’s  shareholders and the government.
After the approvals, Franklin Templeton would take the helm of the  Proprietatea fund from the current management.
 
In the final phase of the selection process, Franklin Templeton Investments  competed with Morgan Stanley Investment Management.
 
Fondul Proprietatea was set up in December 2005 to compensate Romanians whose  properties were confiscated during the communist regime. It owns shares in  nearly 90 companies, including the likes of Transgaz, Transelectrica, Alro,  Romgaz and several power distributors.