
Eutelsat replaces CEO with Orange executive in surprise move
PARIS : Franco-British satellite operator Eutelsat will replace its CEO with Orange executive Jean-Francois Fallacher, it said on Monday, in a surprise move by a company in the spotlight for its role in European defence communications.
Fallacher, currently CEO of Orange France, will take over on June 1, at a time when Eutelsat has said it needs more financing. He will succeed Eva Berneke, who has led the company since 2022.
The Frenchman takes over as Europe is looking for home-grown commercial and defence satellite communication options to reduce its reliance on Elon Musk's Starlink.
Fallacher, 58, is a telecoms sector veteran, having led Orange's branches in Romania, Poland, Spain and France over the last 15 years.
"It is a continuity appointment, not a rupture with the strategy, as the path is clearly traced and the new CEO is committed to build," a Eutelsat spokesperson said.
Shares in the company, up 90 per cent this year, rose 8 per cent by 1148 GMT. Only 20.9 per cent of the shares listed in Paris and London are publicly traded, making it prone to sharp price swings.
A COSTLY MERGER
Berneke led Eutelsat through its merger with Britain's OneWeb in 2023 and a rapid revival of interest in the role of satellite connectivity in Europe.
Eutelsat's OneWeb acquisition gave the group control over the only other constellation of low Earth orbit satellites in the world at the time besides Starlink.
Suggestions the company could replace Starlink in providing internet access to war-torn Ukraine fuelled the biggest weekly gains ever in Eutelsat stock in early March.
Berneke told Reuters last month the company has provided its high-speed satellite internet service to Ukraine for about a year via a German distributor.
"Eutelsat is set for a full alignment with a world where Europe is a strong sovereign space player and strongly aligned with the telecom connectivity ecosystem," Berneke wrote in a post on LinkedIn regarding her departure.
She added that the company was looking to "adjust our governance and shareholder structure", which had paved the way for the CEO change. She did not give further details.
A person familiar with the situation said Eutelsat was facing significant investment demands that would require fresh capital, with a potential share sale a logical avenue.
Eutelsat had said its OneWeb tie-up would lift the group's annual sales to $2 billion by 2027, with OneWeb's second generation of LEO satellites expected to be launched by the end of the decade.
However, Eutelsat now says it needs more than three times the satellites than previously thought, requiring up to 2.2 billion euros ($2.5 billion) in financing.
($1 = 0.8822 euros)
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Business Times
33 minutes ago
- Business Times
Stellantis shares fall as new CEO avoids big shake-up of top jobs
[MILAN] Stellantis new CEO Antonio Filosa started his tenure on Monday (Jun 23) by retaining his previous role as head of the key North American market, while avoiding major changes to the French-Italian automaker's senior management team. Stellantis shares were briefly suspended at the open, after they fell more than 5 per cent. They were down 2 per cent by 1130 GMT, among the worst performers in Italy's blue-chip index, with the limited changes leaving investors underwhelmed. A source familiar with the matter said Filosa's decision to keep the North American post stemmed from his commitment to continue the job he started about nine months ago to revamp the region, which has been at the core of Stellantis' recent problems. He also wanted to continue to manage the impact of US tariffs, the source added. However logical, the decision suggested 'that revamping Stellantis may not be a full-time job', analysts at Jefferies said. Stellantis shares have fallen 10 per cent since Filosa's appointment at the end of May, with investors disappointed that an insider was picked following a six-month long search to replace Carlos Tavares to revive the carmaker's profits, the US business and share price. The global car sector is also struggling with aggressive competition from China, especially in electric vehicles, the impact of US President Donald Trump's import tariffs, as well as regulatory uncertainties. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up 'In this context, these internal choices for CEO position and then for top management do not really offer a catalyst for short-term investors to buy,' said Massimo Baggiani, founder at Niche Asset Management in London, which sold Stellantis shares last year. The new executive team has a total of 16 direct reports to Filosa, compared with up to 33 under Tavares, who stepped down in December. All promoted managers were internal. Filosa, who will hold an online townhall with all Stellantis employees on Wednesday, also plans to meet all members of the senior management team in person once a month, the source said. Cutting ties with tavares Filosa, who turns 52 on Thursday, will for now be based mainly in Detroit. He was promoted to North American chief in October last year by Tavares, in one of his last moves to turn around the business before he quit. The world's fourth-largest automaker by sales had already embarked on a management shake-up in February under the steer of chair John Elkann, who started cutting ties with the Tavares era. CFO Doug Ostermann and Technology and Engineering chief Ned Curic, two key figures in the group's organisation, were confirmed in their roles on Monday, with Ostermann also taking charge of mergers and acquisitions and joint ventures, the company said in a statement. Jean-Philippe Imparato will continue to lead Stellantis' European business. The heads of all Stellantis' 14 brands – which include Chrysler, Peugeot, Jeep, Fiat and Maserati – were also unchanged. Maxime Picat, the group's chief purchasing and supplier quality officer, who also applied for the CEO job and is now seen as a candidate to succeed Luca De Meo as CEO of Renault, has left Stellantis, the company said. His functions will now be taken by Scott Thiele, in a dedicated and newly-created role of head of supply chain, and Monica Genovese, who was appointed head of purchasing. REUTERS
Business Times
an hour ago
- Business Times
Britain's Reform party unveils ‘Britannia Card' to lure back wealthiest
[LONDON] Britain's populist Reform UK party presented plans on Monday (Jun 23) to offer wealthy, often foreign newcomers a 'Britannia Card' to gain exemption from tax on international wealth, income or gains for 10 years for a one-off, £250,000 (S$432,602) payment. The policy draws a new battle line before the next national election with Britain's governing Labour Party. The government has closed exemptions on so-called 'non-doms', or non-domiciled residents, who have long paid little or no UK tax on money earned overseas. Using a press conference to also criticise the opposition Conservative Party for hiking taxes on voters when it held power, Reform UK party leader Nigel Farage said the change would see the £250,000 payments distributed among Britain's lowest-earning 10 per cent of full-time workers. 'We want, as a party, as many entrepreneurs, as many risk takers, as many job creators, as many people paying lots of tax, as many people investing huge sums of money – we want as many of them as possible to be in our country and that is why today we are coming up with this idea of the Britannia Card,' he said. Last year, around 10,800 wealthy people, some non-doms and some British, left the country, he said, using a figure that has been challenged as inaccurate by the Tax Justice Network, a campaign group that looks at tax evasion and avoidance. 'We are also doing something with a very specific aim, aimed at those in work,' Farage said. 'So making that gap between being on benefits and going to work bigger, this policy will directly contribute towards that.' BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up Britain has not published official data on the number of millionaires leaving the country. Reform UK is running ahead of Labour and the Conservatives in the polls before the next election, which must be held by the middle of 2029, buoyed by growing dissatisfaction with mainstream politics and a shift towards its brand of populism. Responding to the policy, British finance minister Rachel Reeves told reporters that Reform had announced a 'tax cut for foreign billionaires'. 'That would mean either taxes on ordinary working people would have to go up to compensate for those lack of revenues, or ... Reform would have to cut public services,' she said. REUTERS

Straits Times
3 hours ago
- Straits Times
Britain's Reform party unveils 'Britannia Card' to lure back wealthiest
FILE PHOTO: British MP and Reform UK party leader Nigel Farage speaks during the party's local elections campaign launch at Utilita Arena Birmingham, in Birmingham, Britain, March 28, 2025. REUTERS/Isabel Infantes/ File Photo LONDON - Britain's populist Reform UK party unveiled plans on Monday to offer wealthy, often foreign newcomers a "Britannia Card" to gain exemption from tax on international wealth, income or gains for 10 years for a one-off, 250,000 pound ($336,000) payment. The policy draws a new battle line before the next national election with Britain's governing Labour Party. The government has closed exemptions on so-called "non-doms", or non-domiciled residents, who have long paid little or no UK tax on money earned overseas. Using a press conference to also criticise the opposition Conservative Party for hiking taxes on voters when it held power, Farage said the change would see the 250,000-pound payments distributed among Britain's lowest-earning 10% of full-time workers. "We want, as a party, as many entrepreneurs, as many risk takers, as many job creators, as many people paying lots of tax, as many people investing huge sums of money - we want as many of them as possible to be in our country and that is why today we are coming up with this idea of the Britannia card," said Farage. Last year some 10,800 wealthy people, some non-doms and some British, left the country, he said. "We are also doing something with a very specific aim, aimed at those in work ... So making that gap between being on benefits and going to work bigger, this policy will directly contribute towards that." Reform UK is running ahead of Labour and the Conservatives in the polls before the next election, which must be held by the middle of 2029, buoyed by growing dissatisfaction with mainstream politics and a move towards its brand of populism. Responding to the policy, British finance minister Rachel Reeves told reporters Reform had announced a "tax cut for foreign billionaires". "That would mean either taxes on ordinary working people would have to go up to compensate for those lack of revenues, or ... Reform would have to cut public services," she said. REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.