US aerospace giant Boeing Co and Brazil’s Embraer SA on Thursday said that they were in talks on a “potential combination,” but cautioned there was no guarantee of a deal.
The talks ignited shares of the Brazilian company, which makes commercial, military and executive jets, despite immediate signs of opposition to the transaction in Brazil.
Any deal would have to be approved by Brazil’s government.
A merger between the two companies would build on their existing alliance on the KC-39 military plane and would permit the much-bigger Boeing to fill a gap in its fleet with regional single-aisle planes.
A transaction would also rebut an alliance between Boeing archrival Airbus SE and Canada’s Bombardier Inc to build smaller planes.
The Wall Street Journal first reported the Boeing-Embraer talks earlier on Thursday, citing unnamed sources.
The report said the parties discussed a deal that would see Boeing pay a “relatively large premium” for Embraer, but that talks are on hold as the two sides await word on the Brazilian government’s view of the deal.
US-traded shares of Embraer shot up following the report, finishing at US$24.42, up 22.1 percent, but Boeing fell 1.0 percent to US$295.03.
However, the Folha de Sao Paulo newspaper reported that Brazilian President Michael Temer already ruled out a takeover of the Embraer, one of Brazil’s flagship companies.
“Embraer will never be sold under my government,” he was quoted as saying at a meeting with the defense minister and head of the air force.
Brazilian officials were reported to have been taken by surprise by the Wall Street Journal story on the merger talks.
Embraer was formed by the Brazilian government in 1969 and privatized in 1994 in a process that granted the government “golden shares” with some veto rights.
The union at Embraer’s Sao Jose dos Campos plant also immediately opposed the deal, saying it would risk the jobs of the 16,000 workers employed in Brazil.
“The possible purchase of Embraer by Boeing ... is rejected,” the Steelworkers Trade Union of Sao Jose dos Campos and Region said in a statement.
“As a representative of the workers, the steelworkers’ union reaffirms its position in favor of a veto over the sale of Embraer,” it said.
Embraer notched US$6.2 billion in revenues last year, while Boeing had US$94.6 billion.
The merger talks come two months after Airbus signed an agreement to take a majority stake in production of narrow-body planes made by Bombardier. Those planes are at the center of an ongoing US trade dispute with Canada sparked by a Boeing complaint against Bombardier.
The US Department of Commerce on Wednesday confirmed nearly 300 percent tariffs on Bombardier’s C-series aircraft. The decision is subject to final approval by the US International Trade Commission, a quasi-judicial agency, which is due on Feb. 1, though it rarely differs from the commerce department.
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