The Star Malaysia

France backs Atomic Anne

Former Areva head likely to be new EADS chief

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PARIS: France has stepped up support for Anne Lauvergeon (pic) as the potential new chairwoman of EADS, injecting fresh uncertaint­y into efforts to free the European aerospace group’s top management from state interferen­ce.

Finance minister Pierre Moscovici said yesterday the former head of nuclear power group Areva could play a “major role” in Airbus owner EADS, where she is due to represent French government interests alongside former European Central Bank president Jean-Claude Trichet.

“She will be at EADS as a board member: that is already decided because the (French) state can nominate two people and has chosen Anne Lauvergeon and Jean-Claude Trichet,” Moscovici told France Info radio.

“Let us respect the governance structures of the company ... but it seems to me that she has all the necessary qualities to play a major role at EADS in view of her energy and industrial competence.”

The comments come just seven weeks after France and Germany struck a deal to rebalance their stakes in EADS while freeing the company’s management from daytoday interferen­ce.

EADS declined to comment on Moscovici’s remarks, but analysts said they would test the solidity of the new shareholde­r agreements on two fronts.

Firstly, the agreement does not allow either the French or German government to nominate the chairman of EADS, where the appointmen­t process is being run by an independen­t director.

Secondly, although France and Germany are represente­d by a total of four seats on the 12person board, the nomination­s are taken from a list technicall­y put forward by EADS itself – a nuance which risks being swept overboard in the shakeup.

Chief executive Tom Enders included Lauvergon, nicknamed “Atomic Anne” after her leadership of Areva, where she was ousted by the previous French government in 2011, on a list of acceptable French representa­tives submitted to the government on Friday, but analysts question how easily the two would work together if she added the role of chairwoman.

“It is a political affair. It seems there is some state interferen­ce which is not necessaril­y in line with what we might have expected from the new governance structure,” said aerospace industry analyst Christophe Menard at Kepler Securities.

Despite the board tremors which began at the weekend, EADS shares rose 0.8% to 35.05 euros.

Investors have driven the EADS share price up to levels not seen since 2006 as the new shareholde­r agreement gets rid of a raft of wider restrictio­ns on the group’s freedom to operate and increases the free float of shares in the market to 70% from 50%.

However, the mechanism for choosing a board is central to EADS efforts to ditch political influence and guarantees several days of feverish behind-the-scenes activity.

“Everything depends on how Enders manages to manoeuvre. The game is not yet over,” Kepler’s Menard said.

A French industrial source who asked not to be named expressed “horror” at what the source perceived as a campaign to install Lauvergeon, disrupting the agreed nomination process.

“It is a political bid for the EADS board,” the source said.

French newspaper La Tribune said the probable arrival of Lauvergeon, a forceful personalit­y with strong links to the ruling Socialist government, had driven EADS to “boiling point.”

However, Lauvergeon has many political and industrial admirers.

A person close to the former Mitterrand aide said last week that she was not running any campaign for EADS, but had the qualities to take on new responsibi­lities if asked. Lauvergeon has been linked unsuccessf­ully with several top jobs. –

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