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Empain-Schneider

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Empain-Schneider was a Franco-Belgian industrial group formed in the 1960s from the merger of Belgium's Empain group and France's Schneider & Cie. In 1980, it was renamed Schneider SA. Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, the group was comprehensively restructured and sold most of its historic activities while acquiring operations linked to electrical equipment, leading up to its renaming in 1999 as Schneider Electric.

History

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In 1963, the Empain group acquired control of Schneider & Cie from the Schneider family, following the untimely death in 1960 of Charles Schneider. Despite economic-nationalistic misgivings from France's president Charles de Gaulle,[1] the two groups gradually integrated their operations and structures in the following decade:

Schneider's historic steelmaking subsidiary, the Société des Forges et Ateliers du Creusot (SFAC), merged in 1970 with the Compagnie des Ateliers et Forges de la Loire to form Creusot-Loire.[3]

In nuclear engineering, Schneider, via the SFAC, had been a major stakeholder of Framatome since its creation in 1958, and became its dominant shareholder in 1976 by acquiring the 15-percent stake previously held by Westinghouse Electric Corporation.

In 1980, the Empain family sold most of its stake, and the holding entity, by then led by Didier Pineau-Valencienne who had worked in the Empain Group since 1958, was renamed Schneider SA to signal its newly predominant French identity. In 1981, Paribas became Schneider's controlling shareholder.[1] In 1983 the group's bank, the BUE, was acquired by Crédit Industriel et Commercial. Creusot-Loire went into insolvency in 1984 and subsequently left the Schneider group's scope. Between 1986 and 1992, much of Jeumont-Schneider was sold in parts to Alstom, Bosch, and Framatome. Meanwhile, Schneider acquired Télémécanique [fr] in 1988, Square D in 1991 through a hostile takeover, and in 1992, full ownership of Merlin Gerin [fr] (est. 1920) in which it had held a stake since 1975. Spie Bagnitolles was divested in 1996, largely completing Schneider's transformation from conglomerate to a global manufacturing company focused on electrical equipment. In 1999, the company was correspondingly renamed Schneider Electric.[4]

Electrorail, formerly a major holding company within the Empain group galaxy, remained traded on the Brussels Stock Exchange until delisting in 2003.[5] Its former head office (French: Siège d'Électrorail [fr]) is a noted art deco building in Brussels.

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ a b François Renard (28 February 1981). "Le groupe Paribas prend le contrôle de l'empire Empain-Schneider : La fin de l'intermède belge". Le Monde.
  2. ^ "Fusion des banques d'affaires de Schneider et d'Empain au sein de l'Union européenne". Le Monde. 25 January 1967.
  3. ^ Ivan Kharaba (2015). "L'union Wendel-Schneider : L'autre histoire de Creusot-Loire (1970-1985)". In Philippe Mioche (ed.). La Sidérurgie française et la maison de Wendel pendant les trente glorieuses. Presses universitaires de Provence. pp. 73–82.
  4. ^ Schneider Electric, 170 years of history (PDF), Schneider Electric, pp. 8, 25)
  5. ^ "Electrorail a tiré sa révérence de la Bourse de Bruxelles". L'Écho. 26 February 2003.

Sources

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  • "Schneider S.A.", International Directory of Company Histories, vol. II, 18, 19, 108, The Gale Group, Inc.
  • "Group Schneider S.A.", International Directory of Company Histories, vol. 20, The Gale Group, Inc.