Arab Times

Great Wall says watching Fiat Chrysler; no talks yet

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HONG KONG/SHANGHAI, Aug 22, (RTRS): Chinese automaker Great Wall Motor Co Ltd reiterated its interest in Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s NV on Tuesday, but said it had not held talks or signed a deal with executives at the Italian-American automaker.

China’s largest sport utility vehicle (SUV) manufactur­er made a direct overture to Fiat Chrysler on Monday, with an official saying the company was interested in all or part of FCA, owner of the Jeep and Ram truck brands.

Automotive News first reported the news, quoting Great Wall Motor President Wang Fengying as saying she planned to contact FCA to discuss acquiring the Jeep brand specifical­ly.

Those comments sent FCA shares higher – but also raised questions over the ability of China’s seventh-largest automaker by sales to buy larger Western rival FCA, or even Jeep, which some analysts value at as much as oneand-a-half times FCA.

Great Wall sought to dampen speculatio­n on Tuesday. It confirmed it had studied Fiat Chrysler, but said there was “no concrete progress so far” and “substantia­l uncertaint­y” over whether it would eventually bid.

“The company has not built any relationsh­ip with the directors of FCA nor has the company entered into any discussion or signed any agreements with any officer of FCA so far,” the company said in an English-language stock exchange filing. It did not give further detail. Fiat Chrysler stock dipped on the statement on Tuesday. Great Wall said trading in its Shanghai-listed shares would resume on Wednesday after having been suspended.

Fiat Chrysler declined to comment on Great Wall’s statement. On Monday, it said it had not been approached and was fully committed to implementi­ng its current business plan.

Great Wall Motor, which was early to spot China’s love of SUVs, had revenue of $14.8 billion last year and sold 1.07 million vehicles – but that compares with FCA’s 2016 revenue of 111 billion euros ($130.6 billion).

Analysts said Great Wall would need to raise both debt and equity to complete any deal, meaning its chairman Wei Jianjun could lose majority control.

One possible scenario, according to analysts at Jefferies, would see Wei keeping a roughly 30 percent stake, while Great Wall would raise $10-$14 billion in debt and $10 billion in equity – hefty for a group currently worth just $16 billion.

Ultimately, politics could be the clincher.

Any bid now – and it would potentiall­y be one of China’s largest ever overseas deals – would come at a time when Beijing is trying to limit extravagan­t Chinese purchases abroad, and when the political environmen­t has cooled in the United States.

China’s cabinet on Friday issued rules on overseas acquisitio­ns for the first time.

And the autos sector would also prove sensitive in both Europe and the United States, analysts said.

For FCA, for now, Great Wall’s approach may be more about flushing out rival interest.

European bankers said Fiat would likely consider doing a deal with a Chinese firm only if they could pay cash and bid for the whole company.

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