The Borneo Post

Alstom, Siemens to merge rail businesses to counter China’s CRRC

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MUNICH/ PARIS: German industrial group Siemens AG and French rival Alstom SA agreed to merge their rail operations, creating a European champion to better withstand the internatio­nal advance of China’s state- owned CRRC Corp Ltd.

Siemens will own 50 per cent plus a few shares of the joint venture, to be called Siemens Alstom, while Alstom will supply Henri Poupart- Lafarge as chief executive, helping to counter criticism that France is giving up control of another national industrial icon.

The non- executive chairman will come from Siemens.

The framework deal, which still has to be approved by Alstom shareholde­rs as well as regulators, is a Franco- German industrial breakthrou­gh for French President Emmanuel Macron but is a move that has riled opposition politician­s.

Their worries centre on France losing control of its TGV highspeed train – a symbol of national pride that has highlighte­d French engineerin­g skill – and possible job losses.

Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire said on Tuesday that the French government welcomed the planned tie-up, which he said would protect French jobs.

The French state said it would not exercise an option to buy a 20 per cent stake in Alstom from industrial group Bouygues SA .

The Siemens and Alstom transport businesses span the iconic French TGV and German ICE high- speed trains as well as signalling and rail technology.

They have combined sales of 15.3 billion euros ( US$ 18 billion) and earnings before interest and tax of 1.2 billion euros.

“This Franco- German merger of equals sends a strong signal in many ways. We put the European idea to work and together with our friends at Alstom, we are creating a new European champion in the rail industry for the long term,” said Siemens CEO Joe Kaeser.

Alstom’s Poupart-Lafarge said: “This is a key moment in Alstom’s history, confirming its position as the platform for the rail sector consolidat­ion.”

Analysts at Deutsche Bank kept a ‘hold’ rating on Alstom shares, saying extracting cost savings from the deal could be tricky.

“Politician­s will also likely try to ensure some form of jobs protection in France ( 28 per cent of Alstom’s workforce) and Germany (39 per cent of Siemens’workforce), making cost synergies difficult to extract,” they wrote in a note.

The deal leaves out in the cold Canadian transporta­tion group Bombardier Inc, which also held talks with Siemens, sources have said, and which faces a separate battle this week to protect jobs in Quebec and Northern Ireland.

China’s CRRC, with annual revenue of about US$ 35 billion, is bigger than Siemens Mobility, the rail and infrastruc­ture division of the German conglomera­te, Alstom and Bombardier Transporta­tion combined.

Previously focused on China, it has won projects in Britain and the Czech Republic in the past year, and is eyeing the United Kingdom’s High Speed 2 project, which will connect London with cities in the north of England.

Siemens will receive newly issued shares in the combined company representi­ng 50 per cent of Alstom’s share capital and warrants allowing it eventually to acquire another 2 per cent of Alstom shares.

However, the deal prevents Siemens from owning more than 50.5 per cent of Alstom for four years after closing, and includes “certain governance and organizati­onal and employment protection­s”, Siemens and Alstom said in their statement.

The deal is unanimousl­y supported by Alstom’s board, Siemens’ supervisor­y board and Alstom shareholde­r Bouygues, the companies said.

The French government acquired its option on the Bouygues stake in Alstom in 2014 as part of a deal that helped Alstom snub Siemens as a buyer for its energy business in favour of General Electric Co.

Macron was economy minister at the time.

The global headquarte­rs, rolling stock business and stock-market listing of the new entity will be in Paris and the signalling and technology business in Berlin.

The new company, with 62,300 employees, targets synergies of 470 million euros four years at the latest after closing of the deal, which is expected at the end of 2018.

The companies said their operations were largely complement­ary, with Alstom present in growth markets in the Middle East and Africa, India, and Central and South America, while Siemens was strong in China, the United States and Russia.

Siemens CEO Kaeser said ahead of the signing of the memorandum of understand­ing he believed the scale of China’s CRRC left little room for regulators to oppose a deal. — Reuters

 ??  ?? German industrial group Siemens AG and French rival Alstom SA agreed to merge their rail operations, creating a European champion to better withstand the internatio­nal advance of China’s state-owned CRRC Corp Ltd. — Reuters photo
German industrial group Siemens AG and French rival Alstom SA agreed to merge their rail operations, creating a European champion to better withstand the internatio­nal advance of China’s state-owned CRRC Corp Ltd. — Reuters photo

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