Fiat
falls 8.5 percent, traders cite Chrysler merger concerns
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[August 06, 2014]
MILAN (Reuters) - Shares in
Fiat fell more than 8.5 percent on Wednesday to their
lowest level this year, with traders citing concerns
that investors who voted against the Italian carmaker's
merger with Chrysler would exercise their right to sell
the stock, potentially jeopardizing the tie-up. |
The decline added to a 3.1 percent fall on Tuesday and the stock was
last quoted down 8.55 percent at 6.26 euros. Trading in the shares
was halted by the Italian bourse on several occasions due to
excessive volatility.
The losses wiped out all the gains the carmaker has made since
announcing on Jan. 1 that it would buy out the shares in its U.S.
unit Chrysler it did not yet own, cementing the creation of the
world's seventh largest auto group.
Fiat issued a statement on Tuesday saying no shareholders had
declared an intention to exercise the exit right at that stage.
CEO Sergio Marchionne wants to incorporate the two carmakers as a
Dutch-registered combine, Fiat Chrysler Automobiles (FCA), paving
the way for a U.S. listing which it hopes will help fund an
ambitious turnaround plan.
But the merger is still subject to some conditions, including a
limit on the number of dissenting shareholders who exercise their
right to sell out.
"The problem remains the cash exit rights," one Milan-based trader
said. "The more the stock drops, it increases the expectation of
more people selling out, which in turn increases the number of
people selling."
Fiat shareholders approved the merger with a two-thirds majority of
those present at a meeting on Friday.
Should enough of Fiat's investors who voted against the merger
exercise their rights to sell by Aug. 20, and the total sum that
needs to be paid for those rights to shareholders and creditors
exceeds 500 million euros ($668 million), the merger could fail,
Fiat has said.
The more the stock falls, the more appealing the cash exit right
price of 7.727 euros per share becomes, increasing the likelihood
that more shareholders sell out.
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This in turn means that the 500 million euro cap could be exceeded
and the merger would not proceed.
The creation of FCA will not lead to significant operational cost
savings or synergies, Fiat has said, and failure to get the final OK
for the tie-up would have little operational impact.
However, a rejection would likely prove embarrassing for Marchionne
and may result in higher financing costs going forward, analysts
have said.
Analysts and management have said chances of this happening were
slim. Marchionne also said that should the merger project fall
through, he would attempt to create FCA at a later stage.
(1 US dollar = 0.7483 euro)
(Reporting by Agnieszka Flak and Stefano Rebaudo; Editing by Mark
Potter)
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