Fiat to buy up the rest of Chrysler in $4.35 billion deal

fiat logochrysler logo

Fiat has signed an agreement to buy the remaining 41.46% stake it does not own in Chrysler Group from the UAW’s VEBA Trust (United Automobile Workers’ voluntary employee beneficiary association), according to Automotive News.

The deal is the final step needed to merge the two carmakers. VEBA will get US$3.65 billion for the stake, while Chrysler has agreed to separately make a total of US$700 million in four annual payments to the UAW’s trust fund.

With the payments, the UAW has agreed that its members will adopt the best practices in use in Fiat’s global plants, instead of those just in use within the US, a Chrysler source told Automotive News.

Fiat will pay the trust US$1.75 billion from cash on hand when the deal closes (expected to be on or before January 20), and there would be no need to make any capital increase through a public stock offering. Chrysler will contribute US$1.9 billion through a special dividend to complete the transaction for the 41.46% stake.

SERGIO MARCHIONNE

“In the life of every major organisation and its people, there are defining moments that go down in the history books,” said CEO Sergio Marchionne in a statement. “For Fiat and Chrysler, the agreement just reached with the VEBA is clearly one of those moments.”

Full Chrysler ownership will allow Marchionne to create a global player to better challenge General Motors and Volkswagen. He earlier estimated that Fiat and Chrysler combined would be the world’s seventh-largest carmaker.

In Europe, where the car market has dropped to a two-decade low, Fiat has been depending on Chrysler to sustain profit. Group net income, including minority holdings, amounted to 1.41 billion euro in 2012, Automotive News reports. Without the US carmaker, Fiat would have posted a loss of 1.04 billion euro.

Since it assumed operational control of Chrysler, which went bankrupt in 2009, Fiat – or Fiat-controlled Chrysler as a subsidiary – has spent more than US$6.3 billion to buy out other stakeholders and consolidate its ownership of the US carmaker.

In 2011, Fiat bought an additional 16% of Chrysler for US$1.27 billion and later paid the US Treasury US$500 million to buy out the government’s 6% stake. It bought the 1.5% of Chrysler owned by the Canadian government for US$125 million and spent US$75 million on an equity capture agreement it enacted.

Today’s announcement of another US$1.75 billion from Fiat and combined US$2.6 billion from Chrysler brings the total to just over US$6.3 billion to give Fiat 100% ownership of Chrysler stock.

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Jonathan James Tan

While most dream of the future, Jonathan Tan dreams of the past, although he's never been there. Fantasises much too often about cruising down Treacher Road (Jalan Sultan Ismail) in a Triumph Stag that actually works, and hopes this stint here will snap him back to present reality.

 

Comments

  • Proton staff on Jan 02, 2014 at 12:39 pm

    Fiat come please JV with Proton!

    Please make Malaysia as your hub for the South East Asia’s mass market.

    Like or Dislike: Thumb up 6 Thumb down 2
  • EnergyAnalyst on Jan 05, 2014 at 6:16 am

    In the meantime, rent a fiat to drive in Langkawi to quench your Italian car thirst. Even Alfa is changing hand for Malaysia, and the dust has also not quite settled. Sigh….

    Like or Dislike: Thumb up 0 Thumb down 0
 

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