The Jerusalem Post

Japanese auto firm buys Fiat Chrysler parts supplier for $7.1b.

- • By JUNKO FUJITA and AGNIESZKA FLAK

TOKYO/MILAN (Reuters) – Japan’s Calsonic Kansei, owned by US private equity firm KKR, has agreed to buy Fiat Chrysler’s Magneti Marelli for 6.2 billion euros ($7.1 billion) to form the seventh-largest independen­t car parts supplier.

The first big deal by FCA’s newly appointed chief executive Mike Manley, who took over in July after the sudden death of long-time boss Sergio Marchionne, creates a company with revenue of 15.2 billion euros ($17.5 billion), the companies said.

The newly formed Magneti Marelli CK Holdings is likely to cut costs through synergies and expand its customer base as components makers try to keep up with a shift by carmakers into autonomous driving, connected cars and electric vehicles.

“This combinatio­n with Calsonic Kansei has emerged as an ideal opportunit­y to accelerate Magneti Marelli’s future growth,” Manley said on Monday of the FCA unit, which specialize­s in lighting, powertrain and high-tech electronic­s.

FCA shares were up 5.2% at 09:06 a.m. GMT as investors welcomed the hefty price tag, which will boost FCA’s net cash position and raises expectatio­ns of a share buyback.

“Getting this transactio­n completed at the price agreed is a significan­t early milestone and accomplish­ment,” George Galliers, an analyst at Evercore ISI, said of Manley and his team’s ability to match Marchionne’s deal-making reputation.

Marchionne had set in motion a process to spin off the unit and distribute its shares to FCA shareholde­rs by early 2019, but said in June that FCA would still be “receptive” to an offer.

Neither FCA nor its top shareholde­r, Fiat’s founding Agnelli family, will have a stake in the combined business but FCA said it would enter into a multi-year agreement to secure supplies to its plants and also to maintain operations and staff in Italy.

KKR bought Calsonic from Nissan and other shareholde­rs in 2016, saying it would help the parts maker, which relies on the Japanese carmaker for most of its sales, to expand globally.

Calsonic has been in talks with FCA for months and made an initial 5.8 billion euro bid, sources have said.

FCA does not break out earnings for Magneti Marelli, which sits within its components unit alongside robotics specialist Comau and castings firm Teksid. The unit employs around 43,000 people and operates in 19 countries.

A takeover of Magneti Marelli had remained elusive as potential bidders were offering too little or were only interested in some parts of the business.

FCA also preferred the Calsonic offer to a pure private equity bidder because it limits the risk of the unit being broken up, sources have said.

JP Morgan and Goldman Sachs were financial advisers to FCA on the deal, which is expected to close in the first half of next year and is subject to regulatory approvals.

 ?? (Rebecca Cook/Reuters) ?? FIAT CHRYSLER assembly workers work on minivans at the Windsor Assembly Plant in Windsor, Ontario.
(Rebecca Cook/Reuters) FIAT CHRYSLER assembly workers work on minivans at the Windsor Assembly Plant in Windsor, Ontario.

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