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Stellantis boss abruptly quits in boardroom clash

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The boss of car-making giant Stellantis, Carlos Tavares, has quit with immediate effect following a boardroom clash.
His abrupt exit from the company – which owns brands including Vauxhall, Jeep, Fiat, Peugeot and Chrysler – comes two months after Stellantis issued a profit warning.
Last week, the firm also announced plans to close its Vauxhall van-making factory in Luton, putting about 1,100 jobs at risk.
Before his resignation, Mr Tavares was one of the most powerful people in the global motor industry.
In a statement announcing Mr Tavares’ departure, Henri de Castries, Stellantis’ senior independent director said: “Stellantis’ success since its creation has been rooted in a perfect alignment between the reference shareholders, the board and the chief executive.
“However, in recent weeks different views have emerged which have resulted in the board and the chief executive coming to today’s decision.”
Mr Tavares had a reputation as a ruthless cost-cutter.
He made his name at Renault, working with the colourful and controversial chief executive, Carlos Ghosn, before taking the top job at PSA Group.
At the time, the French group was close to bankruptcy. He was credited with turning it around before orchestrating a merger with Fiat Chrysler to form Stellantis in 2021, creating a global giant.
“He was known for being able to turn around companies that were troubled,” Hans Greimel, Asia editor at Automotive News, told the BBC.
However, Mr Tavares’ position has been undermined recently by a dramatic fall in sales and profits at the company.
“Critics would say he was just cost-cutting too much and delaying products and also hurting quality,” said Mr Greimel.
In September, Stellantis had issued a profit warning after it reported a sharp drop in sales in North America.
Dealers found themselves struggling to shift a glut of unsold vehicles, which customers simply didn’t want to buy.
The company was criticised for producing too many cars of the wrong type, failing to adapt to changing customer tastes and losing ground to more dynamic rivals.
Prof David Bailey from the Birmingham Business School, told the BBC’s Today programme that while there is “huge turmoil in the car industry generally” Stellantis has its own “particular problems”.
He said: “What’s really, really driving that, I think, is the situation in North America where they’ve had appalling results, a very dated product line-up, rising inventories and slipping market share as a result of which all the stakeholders involved – suppliers, dealers, workers, investors – are deeply unhappy.
“I think that has penetrated the board and made his position untenable.”

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UK bans cattle, pigs and sheep imports from Germany after foot-and-mouth case

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The UK has introduced a ban on pigs, sheep and cattle imports from Germany after a case of foot-and-mouth disease was confirmed in the country.
The government said on Tuesday it will no longer approve health certificates for animals, fresh meat and animal products susceptible to the disease to prevent its spread to the UK where there are currently no confirmed cases.
While there is no risk to humans or food safety, foot-and-mouth is highly contagious in pigs, sheep and cattle, as well as other cloven-hoofed animals.
In 2001 and 2007, the UK suffered major outbreaks of the disease, leading to millions of livestock animals being slaughtered across the country.
Farming minister Daniel Zeichner said the government will do “whatever it takes to protect our nation’s farmers from the risk posed by foot-and-mouth”.
He added: “That is why restrictions have immediately been brought in on animal products from Germany to prevent an outbreak, and we will not hesitate to add additional countries to the list if the disease spreads.
“We will continue to keep the situation under review, working closely with the German authorities.”
Foot-and-mouth disease is a legally notifiable disease, meaning it is an offence not to report a case to the government.
As well as culling animals, farmers affected by the disease could see reduced milk production, as well as wider economic implications such as the loss of access to foreign markets for animals and their subsequent products.
Major outbreaks in 2001 and 2007 cost the public and private sectors billions.
For cattle, symptoms of the disease include blisters and sores on their feet, mouth and tongue, as well as lameness, fever and reluctance to feed.
In sheep and pigs, symptoms typically present as lameness and blisters.
UK Chief Veterinary Officer Dr Christine Middlemiss has asked “livestock keepers to exercise the upmost vigilance for signs of disease, follow scrupulous biosecurity, and report any suspicion of disease immediately to the Animal and Plant Health Agency”.
The government recently announced a £200m investment in the UK’s main research and laboratory testing facilities at Weybridge to bolster protection against animal disease.

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Spain plans 100% tax for homes bought by non-EU residents

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Spain is planning to impose a tax of up to 100% on the value of properties bought by non-residents from countries outside the EU, such as the UK.
Announcing the move, Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez said the “unprecedented” measure was necessary to meet the country’s housing emergency.
“The West faces a decisive challenge: To not become a society divided into two classes, the rich landlords and poor tenants,” he said.
Non-EU residents bought 27,000 properties in Spain in 2023, he told an economic forum in Madrid, “not to live in” but “to make money from them”.
“Which, in the context of shortage that we are in, [we] obviously cannot allow,” he added.
The move was designed to prioritise available homes for residents, the Spanish prime minister said.
Sánchez did not provide any more details on how the tax would work nor a timeline for presenting it to parliament for approval, where he has often struggled to gather sufficient votes to pass legislation.
His office described the proposed measure as a way to limit the purchase of homes by “non-resident non-EU foreigners”. In Spain, people are classed as non-residents if they live in the country for less than 183 days in a single year.
It added: “The tax burden that they will have to pay in case of purchase will be increased up to 100% of the value of the property, in line with countries such as Denmark and Canada.”
Currently non-residents can be expected to pay 6-10% in tax on the property’s value depending on the region and if the property is new or not.
The Spanish government said the proposal would be finalised “after careful study”.

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TikTok users flock to Chinese app RedNote as US ban looms

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TikTok users in the US are migrating to a Chinese app called RedNote with the threat of a ban just days away.
The move by users who call themselves “TikTok refugees” has made RedNote the most downloaded app on Apple’s US App Store on Monday.
RedNote is a TikTok competitor popular with young people in China, Taiwan and other Mandarin-speaking populations.
It has about 300 million monthly users and looks like a combination of TikTok and Instagram. It allows users, mostly young urban women, to exchange lifestyle tips from dating to fashion.
Supreme Court justices are due to rule on a law that set a 19 January deadline for TikTok to either sell its US operations or face a ban in the country.
TikTok has repeatedly said that it will not sell its US business and its lawyers have warned that a ban will violate free speech protections for the platform’s 170 million users in the US.

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