Business World

Nissan in talks to buy Renault stake in merger

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RENAULT and alliance partner Nissan are discussing plans for a closer tie-up in which the Japanese car maker would acquire the bulk of the French state’s 15% Renault holding, people close to the matter told Reuters. The car makers are in talks with government officials over proposals by Renault-Nissan boss Carlos Ghosn that would see Paris give up influence at Renault and the French car maker relinquish control over Nissan, according to three sources.

LONDON/ FRANKFURT/ GENEVA — Renault and alliance partner Nissan are discussing plans for a closer tie-up in which the Japanese car maker would acquire the bulk of the French state’s 15% Renault holding, people close to the matter told Reuters.

The car makers are in talks with government officials over proposals by Renault- Nissan boss Carlos Ghosn that would see Paris give up influence at Renault and the French car maker relinquish control over Nissan, according to three sources.

But any deal still faces significan­t hurdles — not least its extreme political sensitivit­y in France — and has yet to win government approval, they said. To do so, it must balance French and Japanese interests, avoiding the appearance of a takeover.

“Any discussion about a share transactio­n involving Renault, Nissan or the French state is pure speculatio­n,” RenaultNis­san spokesman Jonathan Adashek said. The alliance “has no plans to change the crossshare­holding ratio of its member companies,” he added.

An official at the French finance ministry said the government “totally denied” it was ready to sell its Renault shares to Nissan.

The sources said Renault was being advised by BNP Paribas and Nissan by Nomura on the planned stake sale, which would happen either as part of a broader Renault-Nissan combi- nation or as a “stepping stone” on the way to one. The banks did not respond to requests for comment.

Ghosn has also proposed an interim structure that would see management of Renault, Nissan and Mitsubishi Motors overseen by a Dutch foundation as a prelude to their integratio­n as a global automotive group based in Amsterdam, sources said.

“For the government, a Dutch foundation is not an option,” said the finance ministry official, who declined to be named.

Renault shares closed up around 5.6% at €94.44.

The Renault-Nissan alliance, underpinne­d by cross- shareholdi­ngs, has wrestled intermitte­ntly since its 1999 inception with plans for full mergers that have foundered on objections from France, Renault’s biggest shareholde­r.

But with Ghosn, the alliance’s main architect, now beginning his final term as Renault CEO, the government has been pressing for a tie- up to secure the future of Renault- Nissan, the world’s largest car-making group by sales last year.

President Emmanuel Macron’s government recently told Ghosn’s representa­tives it would be ready to exit or sell down its Renault holding as part of a merger deal that secured French interests, according to multiple sources close to the talks.

Renault holds 43.4% of Nissan but agreed to limit formal control of its larger partner in a 2015 shareholde­r pact that defused a boardroom standoff with the French government. Nissan currently owns a 34% controllin­g stake in Mitsubishi and 15% of Renault, but no voting rights.

Under Tokyo market rules, Renault would lose all voting rights on its Nissan holding if the Japanese car maker raised its Renault stake to 25% or more.

Any move by France to sell most or all of its Renault stake could prove politicall­y risky for Macron, already under fire for letting national champions such as TGV train maker Alstom fall into foreign hands.

Beyond its dilution and loss of influence, France remains concerned about the impact on technology centers, industrial jobs and tax revenues from a combined group headquarte­red elsewhere, the sources said.

To win acceptance, they added, the deal would need to include powerful concession­s and guarantees to France, in areas such as jobs and investment, board representa­tion and possible “golden share” veto rights over major strategic decisions.

 ??  ?? CARLOS GHOSN, chairman and CEO of the Renault-Nissan Alliance, attends a news conference to unveil Renault’s mid-term strategic plan in Paris, France on Oct. 6, 2017.
CARLOS GHOSN, chairman and CEO of the Renault-Nissan Alliance, attends a news conference to unveil Renault’s mid-term strategic plan in Paris, France on Oct. 6, 2017.

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