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FCA and PSA to cancel normal dividend, and John Elkann cancels PartnerRe sale due to COVID19 price change

AlexB

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When will the French learn?
To put it in context, PartnerRE is owned by EXOR and the French Insurance company called Covea made a deal with EXOR in March to buy PartnerRE.

Reinsurers are expected to shoulder much of the burden from Covid-19-related claims. The insurance industry as a whole could end up paying out more than $100bn because of the outbreak.
Privately held Covéa said in a statement on Tuesday that it did not intend to go ahead with the deal “on the terms originally envisaged” because of uncertainties in the global economic outlook. Multiple people on either side of the transaction told the FT the deal is all but dead just days after an attempt to negotiate a new price in light of the pandemic began last Friday.

Exor said that there was a “positive outlook” for PartnerRe and no reason to change the price. “In attempting to renegotiate the agreed deal terms, Covéa has never suggested the existence of a material adverse change, including pandemic risk,” the company said in a statement.
The failure of the Franco-Italian transaction comes at a sensitive moment for Exor, which is in the process of trying to push through a planned merger of Fiat Chrysler Automobiles with France’s Peugeot.




It is also a blow for Covéa and its chief executive, Thierry Derez. Covéa had looked for a big acquisition in reinsurance for years, and the Partner Re deal would have catapulted the France-focused mutual into the big leagues of global reinsurance.
It followed a failed hostile takeover bid for Paris-based reinsurer Scor in 2018, which was aggressively rebuffed and has led to numerous ongoing lawsuits. Scor has accused Covéa and Mr Derez of breach of trust. Covéa remains Scor’s largest shareholder, with 8.4 per cent.

Two people close to Exor said Covéa tried to renegotiate the price but Mr Elkann refused to budge on the terms of the deal.
John Elkann has been clear from the start. PartnerRe is a great business in a strong and resilient sector. So the agreed deal terms were not up for negotiation,” said one of the people, who complained about the behaviour of Covéa.
In an interview with the FT in March, Mr Derez justified the $9bn price tag by arguing that Exor had built up Partner’s life reinsurance business. However, people familiar with his thinking said the pandemic made him reassess the deal.
The memorandum of understanding signed on March 3, one month after the World Health Organisation declared a public health emergency of international concern, specifically excluded “a pandemic” as one of the reasons that would justify the parties from walking away from the deal, the people said.

Exor is currently weighing its options and might consider taking legal action against the French insurer, one person said. Exor declined to comment. The deal is not subject to a significant break-up fee, people close to both sides said.

The board of directors of Fiat Chrysler Automobiles N.V. (“FCA”) (NYSE: FCAU / MTA: FCA) and the managing board of Peugeot S.A. (“Groupe PSA”) each today decided not to distribute an ordinary dividend in 2020 related to fiscal year 2019, in light of the impact from the current COVID-19 crisis.
FCA and Groupe PSA confirm that preparations for the 50/50 merger of their businesses announced in December 2019 are advancing well, including with respect to antitrust and other regulatory filings. Completion of the proposed combination is expected on schedule, before end of Q1 2021, subject to customary closing conditions.
Now notice they (FCA and PSA) didn't do anything with about the nearly $6 billion special dividend that suppose to be paid to FCA stockholders at closing of the merger.....but base on Covea-PartnerRE issue will it (changing the nearly $6 billion special dividend) be the Redline for John Elkann?
 
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Bili

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Special dividend? I think they will abandon it if this crisis lasts longer.
 

AlexB

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Special dividend? I think they will abandon it if this crisis lasts longer.
In that case, I do wonder will John try to change the make up from 50%/50% to FCA:55%-57%/PSA:43%-45%.But I can see PSA shareholders seeing this as an massive haircut for stronger potential, and being upset with Carlos.
 

AlexB

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Some saw that as a warning shot to PSA not to try the same tactics with FCA where Elkann is the chairman.
''With its decision not to accept a discount on PartnerRe, Elkann has sent a strong message to PSA and its CEO (Carlos) Tavares,” an investment banker close to the situation, who asked not to be named, told Reuters.
“The message is: don’t expect to come around and get much different conditions on the FCA-PSA merger”
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