Vinci SA


Vinci, corporately styled VINCI, is a French concessions and construction company founded in 1899 as Société Générale d'Enterprises. Its head office is in Rueil-Malmaison, in the western suburbs of Paris. Vinci is listed on Euronext's Paris stock exchange and is a member of the Euro Stoxx 50 index.

History

The company was founded by Alexandre Giros and Louis Loucheur as Société Générale d’Entreprises S.A. in 1899. SGE was owned by Compagnie générale d'électricité, now Alcatel, from 1966 until 1981 when Saint-Gobain acquired a majority stake.
Companies acquired by SGE include Sogea bought in 1986, Campenon Bernard, bought in 1988, and Norwest Holst bought in 1991.
In 1988, SGE was acquired by Compagnie générale des eaux, now Vivendi. In 2000 the company changed its name to Vinci.
In 2001, it acquired Groupe GTM, which was a combination of Dumez, founded in 1880, and GTM, founded in 1891.
The company went on to acquire Autoroutes du Sud de la France in 2006, and Soletanche-Bachy, the world second largest leading geotechnical specialist contractor, after Bauer, in February 2007. It also bought the UK operations of Taylor Woodrow Construction in September 2008.
Vinci acquired Cegelec, as well as the European aggregates businesses of Tarmac, in 2010 and it bought Meteor Parking from the Go-Ahead Group in September 2010. Then, in 2012, Vinci signed a deal to buy ANA Aeroportos de Portugal for €3,080 million.
In December 2013, Vinci was awarded a contract worth €440 million to build an express-lane highway system in Atlanta, Georgia. In 2014, Vinci sold 75% of the shares of Vinci Park to a consortium Ardian Infrastructure and Crédit Agricole Assurances. Vinci Park then became Indigo. In June 2016 Vinci sold the remaining 25.4% ex-Vinci Park shares to the consortium Ardian Infrastructure and Crédit Agricole Assurances.
Vinci and Orix won a 45-year contract in 2015 to operate Itami Airport and Kansai International Airport in Osaka Prefecture, Japan, at a price of around $18 billion.
In March 2017, the company invested in Brazil to operate the airport use of Salvador, Bahia for 30 years.
In November 2017, the company invested in Sweden to acquire Eitech and Infratek, specialists in electrical works and engineering.
In December 2018, the company announced that it would acquire a 50.01% stake in Gatwick Airport by the end of June 2019 in a deal worth £2.9 billion.

Ownership

The breakdown of shareholders at 31 December 2019 is as follows:
Year2010201120122013201420152016201720182019
Sales33,57136,95638,63440,33838,70338,51838,07340,24843,51948,053
EBIT3,4343,6603,6513,7674,2433,7154,1184,6074,9975,734
Net result1,7761,9041,9171,9622,4862,0462,5052,7472,9833,260
Net debt13,06017,16416,21017,55217,13415,00113,93814,00115,55421,654
Staff179,527183,320192,701190,704185,293185,452183,487194,428211,233222,397

''Source: VINCI

Competitors

VINCI Autoroutes
  • Abertis
  • Atlantia
  • Eiffage
  • Brisa
VINCI Airports
  • AENA
  • ADP
  • Fraport
  • MAHB
VINCI Energiesin France:
  • Engie Energie Services
  • Spie
  • Eiffage Énergie
  • Bouygues Energies & Services
outside France:
  • Siemens
  • Spie
  • Bilfinger
  • ThyssenKrupp Industrial Solutions
  • Minimax
  • Burkhalter
  • Alpiq
EUROVIAin France:
outside France:
  • Strabag
  • Amey
  • Kier
  • Balfour Beatty
  • Tarmac
  • Conway
  • Aggregate Industries
  • Hanson
  • Skanska
  • Metrostav
  • Cormac
VINCI Constructionin France:
  • Bouygues Construction,
  • Eiffage Construction
  • Fayat
  • NGE
  • Spie Batignolles
  • Demathieu Bard
  • Léon Grosse
outside France:
  • Balfour Beatty
  • Kier
  • Laing O’Rourke
  • Interserve
  • Strabag
  • Skanska
  • Porr
  • Budimex
  • Metrostav
  • Trevi
  • Bauer
  • Keller
''Source: VINCI Annual report 2016

Turnover analysis

As of 2013, the turnover was split as follows:
Net sales break down geographically as follows: France, Europe, North America, Africa and other.

Major projects

Vinci and its predecessor companies has been involved in many major projects including:
Vinci is also involved in HS2 lots N1 and N2, working as part of joint venture, with main construction work to start in 2018/9.

Criticism

Vinci is involved in construction of the first 43 km of the Moscow-St.Petersburg toll road through the valuable Khimki Forest. This construction has raised many protests in Russia, 75% of the local community – about 208,000 citizens of Khimki – oppose the project. There have also been numerous human rights abuses surrounding the project, with journalists and activists arrested and assaulted.
Vinci attracted protests in relation to its project to build an airport in Notre-Dame-des-Landes near Nantes, expected to become the third largest airport in France and being built on a site of 2,000 hectares of woodland and marsh with an acknowledged social and ecological value. This project was financed through a public-private partnership with profits going to Vinci. In November 2012, protests took place to prevent the expulsion of villagers and farmers who were struggling to protect their environment who were receiving support at both a national and international level.
Vinci's Norwest Holst and Taylor Woodrow were revealed as subscribers to the UK's Consulting Association, exposed in 2009 for operating an illegal construction industry blacklist. Vinci was later one of eight businesses involved in the 2014 launch of the Construction Workers Compensation Scheme, condemned as a "PR stunt" by the GMB union, and described by the Scottish Affairs Committee as "an act of bad faith".