jeudi 11 octobre 2012

L’Allemagne met fin à l’accord entre EADS et BAE


Infographie : F. Descheemaekere

[Euractiv]

Les deux plus grandes compagnies aérospatiales d’Europe vont repartir de zéro afin d’élaborer de nouvelles stratégies après que l’Allemagne s’est opposée à la fusion entre les deux groupes d’aéronautique et de défense les plus importants au monde.

Britain's BAE Systems, which earns nearly half its revenue selling arms to the Pentagon, could end up a takeover target after failing to seal its €35 billion deal with the Franco-German maker of Airbus civilian jets, EADS. Politically, the deal's failure may hurt British Prime Minister David Cameron, who failed to persuade Germany's Angela Merkel to allow the merger and now faces uncertainty over the future of his country's most important engineering firm. EADS shareholders mainly expressed relief at the collapse of the deal, fearing for their investment in a successful civilian planemaker as it ventured into a declining defence market. The merger's failure is, however, a setback for EADS boss Tom Enders, who had hoped the merger would dilute the political control that Berlin and Paris exert over his firm.
Britain and France both backed the planned merger, but Germany never warmed to it, despite the companies saying they were prepared to pledge to keep jobs there, allow Berlin to hold a big stake and meet other conditions.

Lire : euractiv.com
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