April 25, 2024

Iran Ruling In Europe Draws Anger From U.S.

The General Court in Brussels, the union’s second-highest tribunal, ruled that the bloc wrongly imposed sanctions against the Iranian companies as part of its efforts to stop Iran from developing nuclear weapons, a decision that immediately drew the ire of American officials.

The United States Treasury took the opposite tack on Friday, imposing restrictions on a network of six individuals and four businesses for links to oil sales.

“We are very disappointed by the court’s decision today,” a Treasury spokesman said in a statement. “The evidence linking these banks to Iran’s illicit nuclear activities is clear and strong, and no financial institution anywhere should allow these Iranian banks to transact with them.”

The Treasury said its actions on Friday represented a renewed crackdown to curb the use of front companies, financial institutions and businesspeople to conceal the direct involvement of the Iranian government and entities like the National Iranian Oil Company and the Naftiran Intertrade Company.

The developments came amid signs of a more moderate tone in Iran’s foreign policy after the election of President Hassan Rouhani in June. That has extended to its nuclear activities, which Tehran says are legal and peaceful but which Western nations and Israel consider a cover for developing the ability to make atomic bombs.

The ruling in Europe involved decisions by the union’s governments to freeze the accounts of companies, including Post Bank of Iran, the Iran Insurance Company, Good Luck Shipping and the Export Development Bank of Iran, from 2008 to 2011.

In a statement, the General Court ruled that the Council of the European Union, an executive body of government ministers from all union countries, did not “properly establish” that the companies “had provided support for nuclear proliferation.”

The sanctions will remain in place for at least two months pending any appeal to the European Court of Justice, the bloc’s highest tribunal.

The Treasury Department’s action, which prohibits Americans from doing business with the named individuals and companies, and freezes their assets, was aimed at a network of entities linked to Seyed Seyyedi, an Iranian businessman and the director of Sima General Trading, a company previously penalized by the Treasury.

The Treasury identified KASB International, Petro Royal FZE and AA Energy FZCO as companies based in the United Arab Emirates, controlled by Mr. Seyyedi and helping the Iranian national oil company to evade sanctions.

The Treasury also identified a number of individuals representing Swiss Management Services, National Iranian Oil Company-International Affairs in London and the Iranian Oil Company U.K. as helping the Iranian government evade oil sanctions.

“Our sanctions on Iran’s oil sales are a critically important component of maintaining pressure on the Iranian government,” David S. Cohen, the under secretary for terrorism and financial intelligence at the Treasury, said in a statement.

The ruling in Brussels was the latest in a string of reversals for European Union governments, which have been reluctant to share evidence that they deem overly sensitive or that might compromise intelligence gathering.

Seeking to address the problem, European governments agreed in October to shift tactics by moving away from blacklisting individual banks and instead imposing across-the-board measures, like requiring authorization of transactions of more than 10,000 euros, or about $13,100, with some exceptions for transfers in areas like humanitarian aid, medical equipment and farming.

European officials are expected to hold initial discussions on whether to appeal on Tuesday, according to a European Union diplomat with direct knowledge of those plans. The diplomat spoke on the condition of anonymity because the talks would not be made public.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/07/world/europe/european-union-wrongly-imposed-sanctions-on-iranian-companies-court-rules.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

DealBook: Fiat to Buy Full U.S. Stake in Chrysler

Chrysler 300 at the Detroit auto show.Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg NewsChrysler 300 at this year’s Detroit auto show.

7:02 p.m. | Updated

DETROIT — The Italian carmaker Fiat said Friday that it intended to buy the United States government’s full stake in Chrysler within 10 business days, giving it majority ownership of Chrysler.

The purchase, announced three days after Chrysler paid back its outstanding loans from the Treasury Department, would end the government’s involvement in Chrysler a little more than two years after the carmaker emerged from bankruptcy. It also would return Chrysler to foreign control four years after the dissolution of its merger with Daimler of Germany.

A Treasury spokesman, Mark Paustenbach, confirmed that the department had received notice from Fiat that it would buy the shares, but he declined to comment further.

Fiat and the Treasury will negotiate the purchase price, or have several investment banks determine a fair value if they cannot agree.

Fiat would hold 52 percent of Chrysler after obtaining the government’s shares. Under its agreement with the federal government, Fiat was given the option to buy the Treasury share within 12 months of Chrysler paying back its loans.

By the end of the year, Fiat said it expected to own 57 percent of the carmaker, which is based in Auburn Hills, Mich. The partnership agreement of the companies automatically gave 5 percent of Chrysler to Fiat when they begin producing a car rated at 40 miles per gallon. Fiat originally owned 20 percent of Chrysler and received 10 percent more as a result of helping Chrysler sell vehicles overseas and produce a fuel-efficient engine based on Fiat technology in the United States.

The chief executive of Fiat and Chrysler, Sergio Marchionne, has said he expects to have an initial public offering of Chrysler shares either late this year or in 2012, but Fiat’s decision to buy the government’s stake could affect those plans. Fiat has an option to raise its investment to more than 70 percent by buying a portion of the stake owned by a trust fund that pays for unionized retirees’ health care costs.

On Tuesday, Fiat paid $1.3 billion to buy an additional 16 percent of Chrysler, increasing its ownership to 46 percent, after Chrysler repaid $7.6 billion it had borrowed from the American and Canadian governments.

“We are changing both the image and the substance of our group,” Mr. Marchionne said at the loan repayment ceremony. “And we are regaining the faith of the public at large and, even more importantly, of our customers.”

The Treasury has yet to recover about $2 billion of the $10.5 billion it lent to Chrysler in 2008 and 2009. Some of the money went to the portion of the carmaker — known as “old Chrysler” — that remained in bankruptcy, and is not expected to be repaid. President Obama is scheduled to visit a Chrysler plant in Toledo, Ohio, next week to highlight the company’s turnaround and loan repayment.

Chrysler expects to be profitable this year for the first time since its bankruptcy, a major milestone for a company that came close to being liquidated before the government stepped in to prevent its collapse. It earned $116 million in the first quarter, ending a streak of losses dating to 2006, and its sales and market share in the United States have increased as a result of vastly improved models like the Jeep Grand Cherokee sport utility vehicle.

The Treasury still owns 26 percent of another Detroit automaker, General Motors. It plans to reduce its stake later this year, though it might delay that sale in the hopes of receiving a better price.


Fiat’s Notice of Intent to Buy Out U.S. Stake in Chrysler

Article source: http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2011/05/27/fiat-plans-to-buy-treasurys-stake-in-chrysler/?partner=rss&emc=rss