
	
	by Rhys Jones and Victoria Bryan 
	and Andrea Shalal-Esa
	September 13, 2012 
	
	from
	
	Reuters Website
	
	 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	
	A security guard 
	stands at the entrance to the BAE Systems site
	
	in Brough, northern England 
	October 1 2009. 
	
	REUTERS-Nigel Roddis
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	
	Logo of EADS is seen at the European aerospace and defence group 
	
	EADS headquarters in Les 
	Mureaux near Paris January 12, 2011. 
	
	REUTERS-Charles Platiau
	
	
	
	
	LONDON/WASHINGTON
	(Reuters)
	
	 
	
	In the biggest shakeup in Europe's aerospace and 
	defence sector in more than a decade, Britain's
	
	BAE Systems and Airbus-owner
	
	EADS said they are in advanced talks to 
	create an industry giant that would overtake rival Boeing in sales and 
	contend with shrinking defence spending in Europe and the U.S.
	
	The proposed deal, the biggest since a 2000 pan-European merger created EADS 
	under joint French and German control, could kick-start a wave of 
	consolidation in the sector, as companies vie for shrinking defence budgets.
	
	Boeing CEO Jim McNerney said the Chicago-based aerospace leader isn't 
	threatened by such a merger, which he predicted would mark the start of 
	global consolidation in the defence industry.
	
		
		"I don't see this as something that is going 
		to threaten us fundamentally," McNerney told Reuters after a speech to 
		the Council on Foreign Relations in Washington.
	
	
	Executives at Lockheed Martin Corp declined 
	comment.
	
	An EADS-BAE merger would create an entity with more balanced commercial and 
	military operations, a model that Boeing has followed for some time, 
	McNerney added.
	
	While the complex deal faces obstacles, U.S. government officials were not 
	likely to block it, according to multiple sources close to the matter who 
	were not authorized to speak publicly.
	
	These sources said the companies have already held direct discussions with 
	U.S. officials, though no formal proposal has been put forth yet.
	
	Antitrust concerns in the U.S. would be minimal, given the modest amount of 
	U.S. military revenue generated by EADS and BAE's trusted role on some of 
	the most sensitive U.S. military and intelligence programs.
	
		
		"I can't see anything that's going to be 
		problematic," said Darren Bush, a veteran of the Justice Department who 
		teaches law at the University of Houston Law Center. 
		 
		
		"All the U.S. based companies will grouse 
		but from an antitrust perspective I'm not sure what they can do about 
		it."
	
	
	The deal would give BAE shareholders 40 percent 
	and EADS investors 60 percent of a combined group with a dual stock listing.
	
	
	 
	
	It likely would lower costs, and the group's 
	products would range from Airbus commercial jets and military transport 
	planes to the BAE-made Tornado fighter jets and its Astute-class 
	nuclear-powered submarines.
	
		
		"In a difficult spending environment it 
		makes sense," said Neal Dihora, an analyst at independent researcher 
		Morning Star in Chicago. "EADS has been saying they would like to have a 
		better balance between commercial and defence."
	
	
	It also would simplify a complicated and 
	politically fraught ownership structure for EADS, while reducing its 
	reliance on the cyclical civil aircraft business. 
	
	 
	
	BAE, largely a defence company, would obtain 
	breadth in civil aircraft. Geographically, BAE's strength in the U.S., 
	Britain and Saudi Arabia would complement EADS' operations in Europe.
	
	Sources familiar with the discussions said talks began in earnest in June, 
	and one source close to EADS said they were the brainchild of Marwan 
	Lahoud, who is in charge of strategy and marketing at EADS.
	
	Despite its advantages, the deal faced numerous regulatory, security and 
	cultural hurdles and was far from certain.
	
	French Finance Minister Pierre Moscovici issued a terse statement 
	saying the French state would decide as a shareholder when the time comes 
	and according to EADS governance rules.
	
		
		"No one is counting their chickens just yet 
		as it is a very complex transaction with lots of possible pitfalls, 
		especially government related ones," said a British defence source close 
		to the talks.
	
	
	The two companies have a long history of 
	collaboration and are partners in a number of projects, including the 
	Eurofighter and the European MBDA missile joint venture.
	
	A deal would also bring BAE back into having a direct interest in Airbus and 
	the France-based planemaker's British plants, having sold its 20 percent 
	stake in 2006.
	
	The merger would mark a turning point for BAE 13 years after it was accused 
	of turning its back on Europe in choosing to concentrate on building its 
	U.S. defence business with the takeover of GEC Marconi in preference to 
	merging with Germany's main aerospace and defence group, Daimler 
	Aerospace (DASA).
	
	Spurned by BAE, DASA decided in the same year, 1999, to instead go ahead and 
	create EADS through a merger with French group Aerospatiale and Spain's 
	Construcciones Aeronautica (CASA).
	
	The companies propose issuing special shares in BAE and EADS to each of the 
	French, German and British governments to replace the existing shares held 
	by the British government in BAE and the stakeholder deal in EADS.
	
	If the deal goes through, EADS will also pay 200 million pounds to its 
	shareholders prior to completion to reflect the fact that the two groups 
	have traditionally had different dividend policies.
	
	BAE shares jumped 10.6 percent to 353 pence, giving it a market value of 
	nearly $19 billion (11 billion pounds), while EADS fell 5.6 percent in Paris 
	to give it a market value of $29.8 billion, reflecting the 60-40 split.
	
	One large British institutional shareholder said it was unclear "how 
	appropriate the 60-40 split is." 
	
	 
	
	But he added,
	
		
		"The businesses being put together probably 
		makes sense from a cost-cutting point of view, particularly in a time 
		when constrained government budgets will preclude top line growth in 
		defence spending."
	
	
	
 
	
	 
	
	POLITICAL TIES
	
	A tie-up could also allow EADS to break free from its shareholder agreement, 
	which dictates a Franco-German balance of power at the group.
	
	Tensions between the two sides have been simmering this year, notably over 
	plans to refocus more of the group's activities near the Airbus headquarters 
	in Toulouse.
	
	And a move by the German carmaker Daimler to sell its stake in EADS has 
	exacerbated the issue. Plans by the German government to buy the stake, for 
	a lack of other investors, have reportedly drawn ire from the French side 
	and from EADS management, which wanted less state involvement.
	
	If the tie-up goes ahead, the shareholder pact as it stands would likely 
	become obsolete.
	
	For political and national security reasons both BAE and EADS, which 
	respectively contribute to British and French nuclear deterrent 
	capabilities, will be preserved as separate structures and a new umbrella 
	group would be created, likely to be run by representatives of EADS.
	
	Combined, BAE and EADS would have sales of about 72 billion Euros (57 
	billion pounds), based on 2011 numbers, and would have 220,000 employees 
	worldwide. In comparison, Boeing had sales last year of $68.7 billion, while 
	Lockeed Martin had sales of $46.5 billion, according to Thomson Reuters 
	data.
	
	EADS and BAE said that due to the sensitive nature of the companies' defence 
	business in countries stretching from the United States to Saudi Arabia and 
	Australia, they were talking to governments around the world about the 
	proposed deal.
	
	They said certain defence activities would be ring-fenced with governance 
	arrangements appropriate to their strategic and national security 
	importance, particularly in the United States, given the importance of that 
	market to the enlarged group.
	
	A merger of the two European companies is not expected to raise antitrust 
	concerns in the United States given the modest amount of U.S. military 
	revenues generated by EADS, according to two sources close to the deal.
	
	U.S.-based defence consultant Loren Thompson said a merger of the two 
	would create a larger enterprise that was equally strong in commercial and 
	military products, similar to the strategy already pursued for many years by 
	Boeing.
	
	The Pentagon said it would review the proposed merger if asked. The French 
	government declined to comment while the British government said it was 
	working with the two companies to ensure any deal would serve the public 
	interest.
	
	A top Pentagon official told Reuters last week that further big budget cuts 
	could make the U.S. Defence Department rethink its current wariness about 
	additional mergers among top-tier companies in the weapons industry.
	
	Lazard, Evercore and Perella are advising EADS while Morgan Stanley and 
	Goldman Sachs are with BAE. Among BAE's biggest shareholders is UK-based 
	Invesco Asset Management, which owns 13.02 percent and increased its stake 
	last month. 
	
	 
	
	Its head of UK equities, Neil Woodford, 
	is widely regarded as one of the UK's most powerful and best-performing fund 
	managers.