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Fiat Chrysler puts merger proposal to Renault board

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MILAN/PARIS: Fiat Chrysler has made a “transformative” merger proposal to Renault, the Italian-American carmaker said, in a deal that would create a new third-ranked global manufacturer.


The proposal, finalised in overnight talks with Renault, was being discussed at a meeting of the French group’s board early on Monday.


The deal would create a carmaker selling 8.7 million vehicles annually with a strong presence across key regions, automotive markets and technologies, FCA said. It would generate 5 billion euros ($5.6 billion) in estimated annual savings.


The “broad and complementary brand portfolio would provide full market coverage, from luxury to mainstream,” it added.


If successful, the FCA-Renault tie-up would alter the competitive landscape for rival carmakers from General Motors to Peugeot maker PSA Group, which recently held inconclusive talks with FCA.


It could also have profound repercussions for Renault’s 20-year-old alliance with Nissan, already weakened by the crisis surrounding the arrest and ouster of former chairman Carlos Ghosn late last year.


The FCA-Renault plan would see the two carmakers merged under a listed Dutch holding company. After payment of a 2.5 billion-euro dividend to current FCA shareholders, each investor group would receive 50 per cent of stock in the new company.


It would be chaired by John Elkann, head of the Agnelli family that controls 29 per cent of FCA, sources said. Renault chairman Jean-Dominique Senard would likely become CEO, one said.


Mediobanca analysts said in a note: “The 3 players together, assuming also Nissan taking part to the deal, would sell more than 15 million units per year with clear economies of scale.” Pressure for consolidation among carmakers has grown with the challenges posed by electrification, tightening emissions regulations and expensive new technologies being developed for connected and autonomous vehicles.


“The case for combination is also strengthened by the need to take bold decisions to capture at scale the opportunities created by the transformation of the auto industry,” FCA said.


But the deal still faces political and workforce hurdles in Italy, and potentially also in France. Most of FCA’s European plants are running below 50 per cent capacity.


Fiat said the planned cost savings would not depend on plant closures.


The French government, Renault’s biggest shareholder with a 15 per cent stake, supports the merger in principle but will need to see more details, its main spokeswoman said on Monday.


France will be “particularly vigilant regarding employment and industrial footprint,” another Paris official said — adding that any deal must safeguard Renault’s alliance with Nissan, which had recently rebuffed a merger proposal from the French carmaker.


The Italian government may also seek a stake in the combined group to balance France’s holding, a lawmaker from the ruling League party said on Monday. — Reuters


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