Qatar eyes Daimler’s EADS stake – report
Qatar is interested in buying a 7.5 percent stake in European aerospace and defence company EADS from Daimler, a German magazine reported.
September 19, 2011 10:47 by Reuters
It said members of Qatar’s government had met with German Economy Minister Philipp Roesler two weeks ago, Der Spiegel reported on Sunday.
A spokeswoman for Germany’s economy ministry said she could not comment on ongoing negotiations. A spokesman for Daimler declined to comment.
Any move by a foreign investor to take a stake in EADS would come as a surprise because maintaining a fragile internal power balance between French and German interests in EADS has been a sensitive topic ever since the group was created.
EADS’ defence portfolio includes France’s nuclear weapons and German fighters, and its Airbus subsidiary guarantees about 55,000 civil jobs.
One of the founding shareholders of EADS, Daimler aims to cut its stake and has urged the German government to find a solution, but reports have said that Berlin is having trouble finding an investor who would maintain the balance of power.
Daimler owns 15 percent of EADS and has voting rights for a further 7.5 percent of its shares held by a consortium of financial investors.
Sources have said German state development bank KfW may have to take on EADS shares from Daimler, a solution unpopular with some politicians in Berlin who oppose state intervention in the economy.
Last week, Berlin denied a report it was preparing to take a stake in EADS after failing to find a domestic private investor for part of Daimler’s holding in EADS.
Daimler Chief Executive Dieter Zetsche said this week that talks about the German car maker selling a stake in EADS were progressing, without elaborating.
A ministry source said that while interest from Qatar shows that EADS is highly attractive, any potential purchase of a stake by a sovereign fund would have to be examined very critically because of the company’s strategic importance.
Qatar is no stranger to major investments in Germany, having bought a 9.1 percent stake in Germany’s biggest builder Hochtief last year, and a 10 percent stake in Porsche Automobil Holding for $9.9 billion a year earlier. (Reporting by Birgit Mittwollen and Stefanie Huber; Writing by Maria Sheahan; Editing by David Hulmes)
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