MILAN, June 1 (Reuters) – Stellantis (STLAM.MI) doesn’t want the Italian state as a shareholder because the carmaker is in good condition, its Chairman John Elkann stated on Thursday, responding to enterprise foyer requires Italy to take a position instantly within the group.
Paolo Scudieri, who heads the Italian automotive affiliation ANFIA, was quoted in Il Sole 24 Ore earlier on Thursday saying that it was “obligatory” and “proper” for Rome to instantly spend money on Stellantis as a counterweight to the shareholding of the French state.
The French authorities, a former investor in Peugeot maker PSA which in 2021 merged with Fiat Chrysler to kind Stellantis, is now a “related” shareholder within the Franco-Italian carmaker with round a 6% stake.
“I believe states spend money on corporations when corporations are doing unhealthy. And Stellantis is doing superb,” Elkann stated in Turin in feedback confirmed by a spokesman.
Elkann, the top of Italy’s Agnelli household and the CEO of its funding firm Exor (EXOR.AS), stated France’s function as a Stellantis shareholder was justified by difficulties PSA had prior to now, which required French authorities intervention.
Exor is the one largest shareholder in Stellantis with a 14% stake.
Final yr, earlier than the September elections which introduced Giorgia Meloni’s centre-right authorities to energy, the present Business Minister Adolfo Urso — who beforehand chaired the COPASIR parliamentary committee on safety — campaigned for state lender CDP to purchase a stake in Stellantis.
Urso is among the many promoters of a brand new strategic funding fund Rome is organising, probably permitting the federal government to purchase stakes in listed corporations exterior of the monetary sector and take a extra activist industrial coverage, underneath a draft invoice seen by Reuters.
Nonetheless, a stipulation that the fund can goal corporations headquartered in Italy appears to exclude an funding in Stellantis, which has its authorized base within the Netherlands.
Reporting by Giulio Piovaccari. Enhancing by Jane Merriman
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