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INDUSTRY & TRADE

ArcelorMittal wants ‘amicable’ deal on Italy steelworks

ArcelorMittal has offered to sell its stake or become a minority shareholder in an Italian steelworks after Rome moved to put the plant under state supervision, the chief executive said in a letter seen by AFP Saturday.

A general view shows chimneys past an exit sign at the ArcelorMittal Italia steel plant (ex-Ilva) on November 8, 2019
A general view shows chimneys past an exit sign at the ArcelorMittal Italia steel plant (ex-Ilva) on November 8, 2019 in Taranto, southern Italy. Photo: AFP / Andreas SOLARO

Aditya Mittal wrote to Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni to press for an “amicable solution” to the crisis over the struggling ex-Ilva plant, one of Europe’s largest steelworks.

The letter was dated Thursday, the day Meloni’s hard right government announced it had taken the first step towards putting the plant under state supervision.

Talks with ArcelorMittal, which owns a 62-percent stake, had broken down over how to keep production going and secure thousands of jobs at the plant in the southern city of Taranto.

In the letter, initially reported by the ANSA news agency but then obtained by AFP, Mittal said he was keen to avoid “extreme unilateral actions”.

He says the government appears to want to end its joint venture with ArcelorMittal, the world’s largest steelmaker, in which state investment body Invitalia has a 38-percent stake.

To make a “clean break”, ArcelorMittal has “offered to sell our entire stake to Invitalia for a fraction of our cash investment”, the chief executive wrote, in English and Italian.

“Although Invitalia has refused, this offer remains on the table should the government wish to consider it.”

Alternatively, “we are prepared to remain as a minority strategic partner… as the Italian government decides on a permanent solution”, Mittal wrote.

Debt problems

Rome considers the steelworks a strategic asset, but it has long been plagued by financial problems and environmental concerns.

The operating company, named Acciaierie d’Italia, is no longer able to pay many of its suppliers or utility bills, and the plant is at risk of having its gas shut off.

Italian Enterprise Minister Adolfo Urso earlier told reporters that “we cannot lose any time”.

“We have activated the procedure that could lead to special administration in a few weeks,” he said.

READ ALSO: Italy steel plant blamed for spike in child cancer cases

“On the other hand, if ArcelorMittal makes proposals that are in line with what the government considers absolutely necessary, for the protection of the plant and the relaunch of production, the shareholders can obviously discuss it,” he said.

Special administration would involve appointing commissioners to manage the company and draw up a rescue plan, pending the arrival of a new investor.

In the meantime, the government said it stood ready to guarantee “current liquidity” at the plant with a bridge loan of 320 million euros ($347 million).

Mittal said that if it stayed, his company could contribute up to one-third of the state’s contribution towards purchase of assets in the joint venture, to avoid any concerns about state aid.

ArcelorMittal had responded to a call for tenders after the site was last put into extraordinary administration in 2015, taking over the Ilva group and its 10,700 employees — including 8,200 in Taranto — at the end of 2018.

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FOOD AND DRINK

Domino’s Pizza pulls out of Italy after failing to win over Italians

Customers in Italy found Domino’s Pizza outlets shut this week, as the company has reportedly left the country after seven years.

Domino's Pizza pulls out of Italy after failing to win over Italians

The multinational fast food giant has closed the last of its Italian branches, making its final delivery on July 29th, Bloomberg News reported on Tuesday.

As of Wednesday morning no official announcement had been made by Domino’s representatives, but Italy has been removed from its map of international markets.

A New York Times correspondent who visited one former Domino’s site in Rome found it closed down and bearing a poster advertising a forthcoming piadineria (an Italian stuffed flat bread) franchise.

Searches for Domino’s Rome, Turin and Parma outlets via the company’s Italian site on Wednesday morning simply brought up the messages ‘SU-SA CLOSED’; its lone stores in Verona and outside Milan read “WE APOLOGIZE, BUT THE STORE NEAR YOUR LOCATION IS CURRENTLY CLOSED.”

The response from Italians on social media leaned heavily towards schadenfreude.

“Who would have thought Domino’s pizza wouldn’t have worked in Italy,” read one sarcastic tweet.

“So much the better, they’re not pizzas!,” wrote another.

A select few were disappointed, however.

“Sorry but I’m mad that Domino’s Pizza’s closing in all of Italy. I loved their four cheese pizza,” wrote one commentator (to the consternation of at least one respondent).

https://twitter.com/FredPitalBass/status/1556685030985965569

Domino’s first entered the Italian market in 2015, and before the coronavirus pandemic had plans to open over 800 stores, taking on debt to bring them to fruition.

But the global health crisis dramatically shifted the on-demand food landscape in Italy as small restaurant owners had to quickly adapt to a delivery model to avoid going out of business. 

As a result, Domino’s found itself faced with much stiffer competition than it had reckoned on.

Court filings show in April the company sought and was granted 90-day protection against creditors from a Milan court, which expired on July 1st, according to Bloomberg.

Its most recent annual report shows the company was €10.6 million in debt at the end of 2020.

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