
(Bloomberg) -- French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire said that shooting down a foreign takeover bid for supermarket chain Carrefour SA last week was all about the politics.
In an interview on RTL radio Monday, Le Maire mounted a staunch defense of his decision to kill talks between Carrefour and Canada’s Alimentation Couche-Tard Inc., citing the need to defend French sovereignty and a strategic asset.
“Food security is non-negotiable,” he said, without explaining clearly how the deal might have threatened French food supplies. “The political sense of this economic decision is that I believe in food sovereignty. I want to guarantee that even in the case of a pandemic” supply chains won’t be at risk.
Le Maire seemed happy with the outcome: He said the partnership arrangement that the companies are now looking at is a preferable option.
“‘There was haste from the Carrefour side, but certainly not from the French side,” he added.
Read More: Politics Crashes $20 Billion Canadian Shopping Trip to Paris
Lockdowns have underlined the strategic importance of maintaining basic supplies at times of crisis and the idea of one of France’s biggest supermarket chains falling in to foreign ownership proved too much to stomach just with a presidential election on the horizon next year.
The decision highlighted just how sensitive President Emmanuel Macron’s government is to the potential for attacks from nationalist leader Marine Le Pen or the leftist Jean-Luc Melenchon.
Suez and Veolia
Still, Le Maire hammered home that France “remains totally open to foreign investments,” citing tax cuts and alluding to a study that ranked France as Europe’s top destination for new investment projects in 2019.
He was also asked about another foreign takeover bid -- U.S.-based private equity firm Global Infrastructure Partners offer for the utility Suez SA along with France’s Ardian SAS.
Le Maire said it’s up to the company to decide its future, but he’d like to see Suez reach a “friendly” resolution with Veolia Environnement SA to their long-running takeover battle.
Read More: Private Equity Firms Wade Into Suez-Veolia Takeover Battle
Últimas Noticias
Debanhi Escobar: they secured the motel where she was found lifeless in a cistern
Members of the Specialized Prosecutor's Office in Nuevo León secured the Nueva Castilla Motel as part of the investigations into the case

The oldest person in the world died at the age of 119
Kane Tanaka lived in Japan. She was born six months earlier than George Orwell, the same year that the Wright brothers first flew, and Marie Curie became the first woman to win a Nobel Prize

Macabre find in CDMX: they left a body bagged and tied in a taxi
The body was left in the back seats of the car. It was covered with black bags and tied with industrial tape
The eagles of America will face Manchester City in a duel of legends. Here are the details
The top Mexican football champion will play a match with Pep Guardiola's squad in the Lone Star Cup

Why is it good to bring dogs out to know the world when they are puppies
A so-called protection against the spread of diseases threatens the integral development of dogs
