That has now drawn a livid response from the Hungarian consortium, Ganz-Mávag Europe, which confirmed Friday it will withdraw its bid for Spanish train-maker Talgo — whereas launching a withering assault and authorized threats in opposition to the Spanish veto.
Ganz-Mávag Europe, which is 55 p.c owned by the Hungarian practice manufacturing group Magyar Vagon and 45 p.c by the Hungarian state funding fund Corvinus, wrote in its letter to the Spanish market regulator that its takeover bid for Talgo complies with all relevant authorized necessities and that there are “no well-founded causes” for Spain to reject it.
They intend now to enchantment to the Spanish Supreme Court and “to the competent our bodies of the European Union,” including that if the consortium’s authorized challenges are profitable, they “might take into account” resubmitting their supply for Talgo.
According to Spanish media, Madrid’s block on the deal was motivated by alleged hyperlinks between Moscow and the Ganz-Mávag Europe consortium: Magyar Vagon was a subsidiary of Russian practice producer Transmashholding and has historic monetary ties to Russia’s Exim Bank, and the opposite stakeholder, Orbán’s Hungarian authorities, additionally maintains pleasant relations with the Kremlin.
A European Commission spokesperson mentioned Thursday that “the prerogative lies with the member states” which may prohibit single market freedoms, corresponding to the liberty of motion of capital on public safety grounds, however these measures have to be justified and proportionate to the target.
The consortium made the choice to withdraw at a board assembly in Budapest on Thursday afternoon.