The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Fiat Chrysler and Peugeot sign deal for 50-50 merger

- By Colleen Barry and Angela Charlton The Associated Press

MILAN >> The boards of Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s and PSA Peugeot on Wednesday signed a binding merger creating the world’s fourth-largest automaker with the scale to confront the challenges of stricter emissions regulation­s and the transition to new driving technologi­es.

The companies said in a joint statement the new group will be led by PSA’s cost-cutting CEO Carlos Tavares, with Fiat Chrysler’s chairman John Elkann as head of the board of the merged group. Fiat Chrysler CEO Mike Manley will stay on, though it was unclear in what capacity.

No name for the new company has been decided, executives said, but both Tavares and

Manley insisted it was not a “touchy subject.”

The merger is expected to yield 3.7 billion euros in savings a year, which will be invested in “the new era of sustainabl­e mobility” and to meet strict new emissions regulation­s, particular­ly in Europe.

“‘The merged entity will maneuver with speed and efficiency in an automotive industry undergoing rapid and fundamenta­l changes,” the companies said in their statement.

The new technologi­es include electrifie­d engines, autonomous driving and connectivi­ty, part of what Tavares described as “the transition to a world of clean, safe and sustainabl­e mobility.” Both companies have lagged in developing electric cars in particular.

The deal, which was first unveiled in October, was billed as a 50-50 merger, but PSA has one extra seat on the board and Tavares at the helm, giving the French carmaker the upper hand in daily management.

The executives said they expect the deal to take 12-15 months to close. It will create a company with revenues of nearly 170 billion euros (nearly $190 billion) and producing 8.7 million cars a year — just behind Volkswagen, the Renault-Nissan alliance and Toyota.

No plants will be closed under the deal, the companies said. Savings will be achieved by sharing investment­s in vehicle platforms, engines and technology, while leveraging scale on purchasing.

But the executives also said there would be cuts. Decisions

 ?? BOB EDME — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A Fiat logo is pictured on a car in Bayonne, southweste­rn France.
BOB EDME — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A Fiat logo is pictured on a car in Bayonne, southweste­rn France.
 ?? THIBAULT CAMUS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Peugeot logo is seen Wednesday in Paris.
THIBAULT CAMUS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Peugeot logo is seen Wednesday in Paris.

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