Alstom board to decide on Bombardier rail business bid: source

FAN Editor
The logo of Alstom is seen on the company's TGV high-speed train factory in Belfort
The logo of Alstom is seen on the company’s TGV high-speed train factory in Belfort, France, February 6, 2019. REUTERS/Vincent Kessler

February 12, 2020

PARIS (Reuters) – French train maker Alstom’s <ALSO.PA> board will meet on Wednesday evening to decide on a possible offer for the rail business of Canada’s Bombardier <BBDb.TO>, a source familiar with the situation told Reuters.

French TV station BFM reported earlier on its website that Alstom is set to make a firm offer for the Bombardier division, valuing it at just under $7 billion.

Alstom and Bombardier declined to comment.

Quoting several sources close to the company, BFM said the two firms had been discussing a deal for months and that Alstom had recently made a non-binding offer valuing the business at $7 billion. The new offer would be binding and would be worth less than the first one, BFM said.

BFM reported that Alstom would finalise its offer after Bombardier releases earnings on Thursday. It said that following Alstom’s first offer, considered attractive by Bombardier, the firm had opened its books to Alstom for due diligence. BFM quotes sources as saying that while the firm has a $35 billion order book, many of its contracts are not very profitable.

BFM wrote that Alstom would offer cash for Bombardier’s 70% stake of its railway business and Alstom shares for the 30% held by Canada’s Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec. It also said that Alstom was the only bidder for the railway business, after Siemens <SIEGn.DE> and Hitachi <6501.T> withdrew.

Reuters reported late last month that Bombardier had approached Alstom and Japan’s Hitachi to find a merger partner for its rail business as it struggles to contain costs.

(Reporting by Maya Nikolaeva in Paris, Allison Lampert in Montreal and Arno Schuetze in Frankfurt; Writing by Geert De Clercq; Editing by Sarah White/Christian Lowe/Jane Merriman)

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