Manufacturing & Supply Chain

Tata Motors Agrees €3.8 Billion Iveco Takeover, Creating Global CV Giant

Published:
Jul 31, 2025 6:18 PM
Author:
James Lockwood
Tata Tightens Grip on Europe with €3.8 Billion Iveco Buyout. | Image: Iveco Group

Iveco Group has accepted a €3.8 billion all-cash offer from India’s Tata Motors for its non-defence activities. The tie-up will create one of the world’s largest commercial-vehicle producers and redraw supply-chain maps for cab, powertrain and tyre suppliers on both continents.

Deal at a glance

  • Price & structure: €14.1 per share, valuing Iveco’s civilian operations at €3.8 bn. Defence brands IDV and ASTRA will be sold separately for €1.7 bn, funding an extraordinary dividend of €5.5–€6.0 per share for existing investors.
  • Closing timetable: subject to regulatory clearance, the tender offer is expected to settle in H1 2026.
  • Scale: the combined business targets annual sales of about 540,000 vehicles and revenues of roughly €22 bn, split 50 % Europe, 35 % India and 15 % Americas.

Strategic rationale: complementary footprints, no cuts

Tata and Iveco overlap little in either products or geography, reducing integration risk. The companies have agreed not to close plants or cut jobs for at least two years, and Iveco’s HQ will stay in Turin.

“This combination will allow us to better serve our customers with a broader, more advanced product portfolio and deliver long-term value to all stakeholders,” said Olof Persson, CEO, Iveco Group.

Tata Motors chairman Natarajan Chandrasekaran added: “The combined group will compete on a truly global basis with two strategic home markets in India and Europe.”

Financial backdrop: Iveco’s mixed Q2

Iveco announced the deal alongside Q2 2025 results that showed revenue down 3.5 % year-on-year to €3.78 bn and adjusted EBIT down to €215 m. Bus and Defence divisions grew, but Trucks fell 8.9 %. Free cash flow turned positive at €145 m. The group cut full-year EBIT guidance to €880–€980 m.

Why it matters for tyre suppliers

  1. Bigger global volumes: A 540k-unit platform gives the new group stronger purchasing power on OE tyre contracts.
  2. Dual-continent production: Plants in India and Europe will demand harmonised tyre specifications—opportunities for suppliers able to offer global homologations.
  3. Zero-emission push: Both companies cite electrification as a merger driver, signalling accelerated development of e-truck tyre lines and aftermarket services.
  4. Stable manufacturing footprint: No plant closures for at least two years preserve current tyre-fitment programmes at Iveco facilities such as Ulm (Germany) and Valladolid (Spain).

Next steps

  • Regulatory review in the EU, India and the US.
  • Defence unit sale to Leonardo slated to complete by 31 March 2026; if delayed, Iveco will spin the unit off.
  • Tender offer launch once the offer document is approved by Italian regulator CONSOB, expected within 20 days.

Tagged with: Tata Motors, Iveco, commercial vehicle merger, truck manufacturing, global OEM acquisition, tyre supply chain, €3.8 bn deal, Turin HQ, zero-emission trucks

Disclaimer: This content may include forward-looking statements. Views expressed are not verified or endorsed by Tyre News Media.

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