Peugeot family plans to retain long-term share in PSA

China’s Dongfeng and the French state took stakes in PSA-Peugeot-Citroen group last month

Workers make final inspections of a Peugeot 3008 on the production line. The founding family’s shareholding was diluted last month to 14.1 per cent, putting it on parity with the French state and Dongfeng with similar holdings. Photograph: Tomohiro Ohsumi/Bloomberg
Workers make final inspections of a Peugeot 3008 on the production line. The founding family’s shareholding was diluted last month to 14.1 per cent, putting it on parity with the French state and Dongfeng with similar holdings. Photograph: Tomohiro Ohsumi/Bloomberg

The Peugeot family intends to retain a long-term shareholding in the PSA-Peugeot-Citroen group after China's Dongfeng and the French state last month took stakes, Robert Peugeot, head of the FFP family holding company, told business daily Les Echos.

Last month's €3 billion capital increase saw the founding family's shareholding diluted to 14.1 per cent, putting it on parity with the French state and Dongfeng with similar holdings. It also ceded control of the supervisory board to the government representative, Louis Gallois.

“There is no change, there is still a strong family presence,” Mr Peugeot told the newspaper. “We have a very long history in the auto sector and we want to maintain that.”

Asked whether the family could at any time pull out of the car-maker, he said: “The answer is a clear ‘no’. Our current investment proves that.”

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PSA is banking on its ties with Dongfeng to help it to fund its future expansion and accelerate its growth in China and other Asian markets. (Reuters)