Business Day

Siemens-Alstom merger scuppered

EU regulator rejects warnings of Chinese competitio­n and vetoes proposed merger of French and German firms

- Aoife White and Oliver Sachgau Brussels/Munich

Siemens and Alstom suffered the final blow to their rail merger plans after EU antitrust regulators refused to cave in to warnings about the looming threat of Chinese competitio­n.

Siemens and Alstom suffered the final blow to their rail merger plans after EU antitrust regulators refused to cave in to warnings about the looming threat of Chinese competitio­n.

EU competitio­n commission­er Margrethe Vestager formally vetoed the tie-up, saying the firms “were not willing to address our serious competitio­n concerns” about control over rail signalling systems and highspeed trains.

The decision is a victory for Vestager, who came under intense pressure from French and German ministers demanding the creation of a European “champion” able to meet competitio­n from China.

The tie-up, unveiled in September 2017, would have merged Siemens’s mobility unit and Alstom to create an entity with about €15bn in revenue.

“We’re not supposed to be political,” Vestager told reporters in Brussels. “We’re not supposed to say, lean to one side, or the other side, we’re supposed to look at the facts of the case. But we have a very, very clear value-based mandate, to make sure that the market serves consumers and customers.”

The deal would have created the undisputed market leader for some signalling and a dominant player in high-speed trains, the EU said. Chinese suppliers for signalling “are not present” in Europe and it “will take a very long time before they can become credible suppliers”. Chinese rivals for very highspeed trains are “highly unlikely” to rival the companies in the region in the foreseeabl­e future.

The companies failed to fully address the EU’s concerns because their offer to sell signalling businesses was “a complex mix” that was not a “standalone and future-proof business” allowing a buyer to compete against the merged firm, the EU said.

Alstom shares rose as much as 5.5% in Paris, while Siemens fell as much as 1% in Frankfurt. The offer to sell Alstom’s Pendolino was deemed to fall short because it was “a train currently not capable of running at very high speeds”.

A pledge to license Siemens’s Velaro train technology was restrictiv­e and would not have allowed a rival to develop a competing very high-speed train, the EU said.

Siemens CEO Joe Kaeser said while not unexpected, the decision “proves that Europe urgently needs structural reform”. He said the “upcoming European elections and subsequent new leadership will provide a unique opportunit­y to shape a Europe of the future”.

French finance minister Bruno Le Maire and German economy minister Peter Altmaier, who lobbied in favour of the deal, said they would work to overhaul European competitio­n rules and industrial policy.

“This decision is based on the facts at hand after a very thorough 16-month investigat­ion by the European Commission,” Canadian rival Bombardier said. The tie-up would have “severely undermined the health and competitiv­eness of the whole European rail market, leaving European consumers, both as rail users and taxpayers, to pay the price”, it said.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Merger off track: Employees work at the Alstom highspeed train TGV factory in Belfort, France.
/Reuters Merger off track: Employees work at the Alstom highspeed train TGV factory in Belfort, France.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa