The direction of the embattled Fiat conglomerate took an abrupt turn Friday with the death of the company's patriarch, Giovanni Agnelli, potentially opening the door to faster and more sweeping change, especially for the company's floundering auto business.
Agnelli's death came just a few hours before members of the Agnelli family, which founded Fiat and still controls it, were scheduled to gather here to review the family holding company's annual results for last year.
At a hurried 50-minute meeting Friday, the family designated Umberto Agnelli, Giovanni's younger brother, to take over as president of the holding company, Giovanni Agnelli & Compagnie. Through it and several other layers of holding companies, the family controls roughly one-third of Fiat's shares, along with a far-flung archipelago of other investments around the world. Family members at the meeting also agreed to propose a capital increase of 250 million euros (US$270 million) for the family holding company.
In a statement afterward, the family said Umberto Agnelli, 68, had been asked to declare himself available to take on executive responsibilities at Fiat, and that he had agreed. A person close to the family said that this meant the family would propose Umberto Agnelli to succeed Paolo Fresco as chairman of Fiat. Fresco has said he would retire this summer when he turns 70; the next Fiat general shareholders' meeting is in May.
The decisions were notable because Fiat has been struggling to work off a considerable debt and to overhaul its biggest and best-known business, Fiat Auto Holdings, which has been unprofitable since the late 1990s and may have lost more than US$1 billion last year.
The steps were immediately interpreted by the financial markets as signs that Fiat may now rapidly reduce its stake in Fiat Auto or pull out of it altogether, if buyers can be found for it.
In trading on the Milan exchange, shares in Fiat reacted by shooting up more than 5 percent, but they settled back to close with a slight loss at 8.096 euros (US$8.77). Shares in the two major holding companies, known by their Italian initials IFI and IFIL, through which the Agnelli family company controls Fiat, posted gains.
"There is no doubt that Gianni was regarded as a force for continuity regarding the group's plans," said John Lawson of Salomon Smith Barney. "No doubt the assumption is that under Umberto, the rest of the family has less of an emotional attachment to some of old Fiat."
As Gianni's health failed in recent months, Umberto Agnelli assumed greater responsibility for the family's business affairs, but Gianni's influence was still strongly felt.
In recent weeks, Fresco, with the advice of investment bankers, has been hammering out plans to spin off Fiat Auto from the remainder of the group and then bring in new investors to pump some 5 billion euros in fresh capital into the auto company. People with knowledge of the discussions said the final plan may include provisions to inject fresh capital into two other large Fiat businesses, the farm and construction equipment maker Case New Holland and the truck maker Iveco.
The developments are being followed with intense interest at General Motors, which took a 20-percent stake in Fiat Auto in 2000 and gave Fiat the option of requiring GM to buy the rest of it starting next year, called a put option. Fresco met last week with GM's chief executive, Richard Wagoner, and its chief financial officer, John Devine, to lay out Fiat's plans, but he received no commitment from them.



