Why Tata Motors' $4.4B Iveco acquisition is getting delayed
What's the story
Tata Motors' $4.4 billion acquisition of Italian commercial vehicle manufacturer Iveco has been delayed, the latter announced on Thursday. The deal was originally expected to close in the June quarter but is now likely to be finalized by September quarter. The delay is mainly due to pending regulatory approvals from European authorities, even though Iveco has received most required clearances. Iveco was formerly part of Fiat's commercial vehicle division before becoming an independent entity.
Approval status
Deal pending regulatory approvals
The pending regulatory approvals for Tata Motors' acquisition of Iveco include those from the European Central Bank and the European Competition Commission. These clearances are necessary as part of the merger process. Tata Motors announced the plan to acquire Iveco in July 2025. The deal, worth $4.4 billion, is aimed at expanding Tata Motors' global footprint in the commercial vehicle sector. The acquisition will create a global commercial vehicle business with sales of over 540,000 units and revenue exceeding $25B.
Acquisition scale
Second-largest acquisition for Tata group
The Iveco deal is Tata Motors' biggest acquisition since its $2.3 billion buyout of Jaguar Land Rover in 2008. For the Tata group, it is the second-largest buyout after Tata Steel Ltd's $13.1 billion purchase of Corus Group in 2007. Analysts had previously predicted a delay in this deal due to the number of regulatory approvals required.
Financial outlook
Iveco reports €75 million quarterly loss
Iveco reported a quarterly loss of €75 million in 2025-26, compared to a profit of €60 million in the previous year. Its net revenue grew by 1% to €2.83 billion. The company faced challenges such as rework costs in the bus segment, slow volume growth, and quality-improvement-related expenses. CEO Olof Persson expects profitability to improve in H2 2026 due to actions taken in H1 and an accelerated efficiency program.