Why Montezemolo resigned and what it means for Fiat
#1
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Why Montezemolo resigned and what it means for Fiat
http://www.autocar.co.uk/blogs/autoc...-for-fiat.aspx
Steve Cropley
Officially, Fiat chairman Luca di Montezemolo, Italian car industry grandee for a quarter of a century, has announced his retirement “because he has completed the assignment given to him”.
Excuse me, however, if I choose to presume that there’s more to it than that - especially since Automotive News (usually well plugged into the Italian scene) reports well-placed sources as suggesting that a big part of Montezemolo’s motivation is that he doesn’t agree with the big plan planned by CEO Sergio Marchionne, to separate the Fiat automotive interests (currently responsible for more than 50 per cent of its earnings) from the rest of the group.
What strikes me as highly unusual is that Montezemolo has clearly lost a key boardroom battle, something which hasn’t happened in living memory, at least in public. Credited with reviving Ferrari after the death of the founder and building it into a powerful industrial enterprise, Montezemolo has had what amounts to dictatorial powers for many years.
Now his authority has been tested against that of Sergio Marchionne, and the younger man is clearly the winner. Montezemolo will stay on the Fiat board, and will continue to play in the Ferrari backyard as chairman, but his time at the top if Fiat has ended.
The great advantage of an independent Fiat automotive group, the financial experts say, is that that it can benefit more directly from its own profits, will be able to raise investment funds more easily, and to enter into the co-operative deals with other manufacturers which many manufacturers now regard as the way forward in the post-recession era.
This afternoon we’ll hear chapter and verse about Fiat Auto’s (and Chrysler’s) corporate and model strategy for the next five years. The decisive boardroom victory of Marchionne over Montezemolo means that if this new set-up succeeds - as a growing group of pundits, even Americans, suggest it will - only one man will be able to take the credit.
If it fails, only one man will take the blame.
Officially, Fiat chairman Luca di Montezemolo, Italian car industry grandee for a quarter of a century, has announced his retirement “because he has completed the assignment given to him”.
Excuse me, however, if I choose to presume that there’s more to it than that - especially since Automotive News (usually well plugged into the Italian scene) reports well-placed sources as suggesting that a big part of Montezemolo’s motivation is that he doesn’t agree with the big plan planned by CEO Sergio Marchionne, to separate the Fiat automotive interests (currently responsible for more than 50 per cent of its earnings) from the rest of the group.
What strikes me as highly unusual is that Montezemolo has clearly lost a key boardroom battle, something which hasn’t happened in living memory, at least in public. Credited with reviving Ferrari after the death of the founder and building it into a powerful industrial enterprise, Montezemolo has had what amounts to dictatorial powers for many years.
Now his authority has been tested against that of Sergio Marchionne, and the younger man is clearly the winner. Montezemolo will stay on the Fiat board, and will continue to play in the Ferrari backyard as chairman, but his time at the top if Fiat has ended.
The great advantage of an independent Fiat automotive group, the financial experts say, is that that it can benefit more directly from its own profits, will be able to raise investment funds more easily, and to enter into the co-operative deals with other manufacturers which many manufacturers now regard as the way forward in the post-recession era.
This afternoon we’ll hear chapter and verse about Fiat Auto’s (and Chrysler’s) corporate and model strategy for the next five years. The decisive boardroom victory of Marchionne over Montezemolo means that if this new set-up succeeds - as a growing group of pundits, even Americans, suggest it will - only one man will be able to take the credit.
If it fails, only one man will take the blame.
#2
Lexus Test Driver
Hm.
I wish I was more informed about Fiat s.P.a. to make more intelligent comments but this is very interesting.
Even with my limited knowledge I knew Montezemolo was basically God in Italy--apparently the Old Testament has ended and Sergio is Jesus....
I wonder if there were any disagreements regarding Fiat's role as the carrier of Chrysler. Considering how they've posted close to $4 billion in losses, have a terrible lineup made up of terribly-made vehicles--and Fiat's reputation here in the States is pretty dismal at best.
I wish I was more informed about Fiat s.P.a. to make more intelligent comments but this is very interesting.
Even with my limited knowledge I knew Montezemolo was basically God in Italy--apparently the Old Testament has ended and Sergio is Jesus....
I wonder if there were any disagreements regarding Fiat's role as the carrier of Chrysler. Considering how they've posted close to $4 billion in losses, have a terrible lineup made up of terribly-made vehicles--and Fiat's reputation here in the States is pretty dismal at best.
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