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France nationalizes STX yard, buying time to renegotiate saleFrance nationalizes STX yard, buying time to renegotiate sale

The French state is exercising its pre-emptive right to acquire the remaining share capital in STX France, buying time to continue negotiations with Italy. This is a temporary move that will cost France about €80m.

Michèle Valandina, French correspondent

July 27, 2017

2 Min Read
Credit: Seatrade Cruise News

The decision follows Italy's rejection of new French terms for the acquisition of the Saint-Nazaire yard that would split the STX France share capital equally between France and Italy and let Fincantieri appoint the president and general manager, giving it operational control. Rome sought at least 51% of the share capital and control of the executive board.

French Economy Minister Bruno Le Maire on Thursday said the sole reason for exercising the pre-emptive right is to 'protect our strategic interests and our unique shipbuilding industry know-how. We will continue to negotiate for the best possible terms with our Italian partners on this basis.'

Le Maire said the intention is not for shipyard to remain in state control and he hopes a solution will be reached in the weeks to come. The minister plans to travel to Rome on Tuesday for talks with Finance Minister Pier Carlo Padoan and Economy Development Minister Carlo Calenda.

In negotiating the sale of STX France following the collapse of South Korean parent STX, the former French government reached a deal where the state would keep its 33.3% stake and veto right, while Italy's Fincantieri got 66.6%. Subsequently Fincantieri agreed to reduce its stake to 48% by selling some shares to an Italian investment consortium, Fondanzione CR Trieste, and French state-controlled naval shipbuilder DCNS was to take a 12% stake.

But in April, new French President Emmanuel Macron announced his administration would renegotiate the deal with Italy, leading to the 50-50 proposal that was rejected at midnight.

STX France is an important cruise shipbuilder whose clients include MSC Cruises and Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd. MSC is building MSC Belissima and two Meraviglia-Plus ships there, as well as two World-class vessels. Royal Caribbean is building Symphony of the Seas plus a fifth Oasis-class ship for Royal Caribbean International and Celebrity Edge, Celebrity Beyond and two more Edge-class ships for Celebrity Cruises.

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About the Author

Michèle Valandina

French correspondent

A graduate from Lyon University, where she specialised in foreign languages and American literature, Michèle worked as an interpreter/translator (English, German and Italian) for major international events before entering the diplomatic world for a few years. As a Paris-based freelance travel and lifestyle writer, she has been a contributor to a host of publications and has long specialised in two sectors: cruising and wellness. Her features have appeared in, among others, Le Monde, Le Figaro, Le Figaro Magazine, Les Echos Week-end and periodicals dedicated to the MICE sector. She has also featured on radio and TV travel programmes and, since 1992, has been the author of the only French cruise guide, Croisières Passion.

 

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