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Sources confirm that the merger of Europe satellites is still intact, despite the announcement being withdrawn.

People familiar with the discussions said that European aerospace giants held investors back for an extra day on Wednesday, as lawyers and advisors sifted through the fine print, but the merger plans were still intact.

This week, it was reported that Airbus Thales and Leonardo have reached an agreement to pool their satellite-making activities in order to challenge Elon Musk's Starlink.

The initial plans for an announcement on Wednesday were slipped, but no new obstacles appeared. A deal seemed to have been delayed by no more that 24 or 48 hours unless there was a more substantial problem.

The announcement is ready, but that doesn't necessarily mean you haven't worked out the last details. One person said, "It is technically, industrially and financially complex."

Thales, Airbus, and Leonardo have all declined to comment.

The talks are the latest attempt at bringing together Europe's fragmented satellite industry.

SpaceX, led by Musk, has dwarfed Europe's leading players: Airbus as well as Leonardo in Italy and Thales in France.

Sources say that they plan to combine satellite assets with a new holding firm, each receiving about a third after a series balancing payments. However, the new structure could take two years to implement, pending regulatory approvals.

The EU has imposed antitrust restrictions on previous attempts to merge.

SHIFT TO LOW EARTH ORBIT

According to insiders, the trio has realised that they can't prosper on their own in a market undergoing a dramatic transformation.

According to global data for 2010-25 from the specialist advisory firm Quilty Space, the merger will make Maxar, Northrop Grumman, and Lockheed Martin the third largest manufacturers of commercial geostationary space satellites.

The space market has declined due to the proliferation of low-Earth orbit satellites, like Starlink.

Caleb Henry is Quilty's director of research. "Europe had a commanding advantage in many geostationary satellites manufacturing and it was arguably never lost," he said. It's just this market has shrunk significantly in front of these new titans: the low Earth-orbit bandwidth constellations.

The companies will outline the general structure and goals of the merger plan code-named Projet Bromo without dwelling on the details of corporate governance, which would be decided later, after a time of separate operations.

In past European aerospace mergers including Airbus, the balance of power, and who appointed the chairperson, CEO, and CFO, caused friction.

Sources said that the parties were committed to working together on satellites. This was partly due to losses and a declining market share. (Reporting and editing by Alexander Smith, Aidan Lewis; Reporting by Tim Hepher)

(source: Reuters)