Indra, EM&E resume merger talks as Spain seeks to block German bid, report says

Industry:    18 hours ago

Spain’s state holding company SEPI has resumed talks to merge Indra with privately held defence firm Escribano Mechanical & Engineering (EM&E) ​in a deal the Spanish government deems strategically ‌important, newspaper El Economista reported on Thursday.

With the move, Madrid seeks to block a competing bid for EM&E by Germany’s Rheinmetall by folding ​EM&E into Indra – in which SEPI holds a 28% ​stake – the report said, citing sources familiar with the ⁠operation.

The merger’s final structure has not been decided and could ​include cash as well as shares, El Economista added. It ​said Indra had previously examined up to six alternatives.

Indra and Rheinmetall declined to comment on the report while neither SEPI nor EM&E responded to ​requests for comment.

The same newspaper reported in late March that ​Rheinmetall was studying a preliminary bid for EM&E after talks with Indra collapsed ‌over conflict ⁠of interest concerns. According to El Economista, EM&E’s owners value their company at no less than 2.3 billion euros ($2.7 billion).

Siblings Angel and Javier Escribano, who each own half of EM&E, also ​have a 14.7% ​stake in ⁠Indra.

Angel Escribano resigned as Indra’s chairman on April 1 following government pressure over worries the family ​was accruing too much influence within Spain’s defence ​sector. Meanwhile, ⁠his brother Javier retains a seat on Indra’s board.

The Spanish government has been taking a more active role through SEPI in ⁠companies ​it considers strategic. Last year, it helped ​replace Telefonica CEO Jose Maria Alvarez-Pallete with Marc Murtra, who previously helmed Indra.

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