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Tata Motors’ $4.5B Iveco bid sends shares sliding: here’s why investors are wary

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Tata Motors took a hit on Wednesday, with shares falling more than 4% after reports surfaced about a possible $4.5 billion bid for Italian truckmaker Iveco.

The story, first picked up by European media outlets and quickly echoed in Indian financial circles, suggests the deal is in an advanced stage, though neither company has issued a formal statement yet.

If it goes through, the acquisition would be Tata Motors’ biggest in the auto space, eclipsing its $2.3 billion purchase of Jaguar Land Rover back in 2008.

For now, investors seem uneasy. The stock’s decline reflects concerns about timing, scale, and how the market for commercial vehicles, especially in Europe, might evolve in the next few years.

The proposed deal

Tata Motors is reportedly eyeing a 27.1% stake in Iveco, planning to buy it from Exor, the investment firm controlled by Italy’s Agnelli family through a Dutch special-purpose vehicle.

The deal structure also includes a tender offer to mop up shares from smaller investors, effectively giving Tata control of the truckmaker.

If both boards sign off, the announcement could come as soon as today.

Notably, the agreement would carve out Iveco’s defense division, which is being spun off and marketed separately.

That move is likely aimed at smoothing the regulatory path, especially in light of Italy’s so-called “golden power” rules, laws that allow the government to block or revise deals involving sensitive national security assets.

Given Iveco’s military ties, those protections could still pose a last-minute hurdle.

On the business side, Iveco brought in €15 billion in revenue last year, with an adjusted EBIT margin of 5.7%.

Europe remains its core market, contributing nearly 75% of total sales, making the deal a potentially strategic entry point for Tata as it looks to scale its global commercial vehicle business.

Tata Motors stock: Why market is skeptical about the proposed deal?

Tata Motors shares came under pressure on Wednesday, slipping nearly 4% to ₹665.45 on the BSE by early afternoon.

Investors appeared wary of the implications, especially given Tata Motors’ ongoing efforts to steady its global operations and manage debt.

At $4.5 billion, the acquisition would be Tata Motors’ largest since Jaguar Land Rover in 2008, and it comes at a time when balance sheet discipline remains a priority.

The potential rise in leverage has sparked caution, as integrating a business like Iveco won’t be straightforward.

It comes with its own set of systems, markets, and regulatory challenges, especially in Europe, where the commercial vehicle sector faces frequent economic ups and downs, tightening emissions rules, and heavy competition.

Although Iveco’s recent revenue growth looks solid on paper, sustaining profitability in such an environment is no guarantee.

Many analysts agree that the strategic logic behind the deal is clear, but executing it successfully is another matter.

For now, investors seem to be taking a wait-and-watch approach, looking for more clarity on how Tata Motors plans to finance the deal and what kind of cost or operational synergies it can realistically deliver.

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