Finance

Forvia to sell its interiors business to Apollo Funds for $2.1 billion

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review

Posted on April 27, 2026

2 min read

· Last updated: April 27, 2026

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Forvia to sell its interiors business to Apollo Funds for $2.1 billion
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April 27 (Reuters) - French car parts supplier Forvia will sell its Interiors business to Apollo Funds for 1.82 billion euros ($2.13 billion), it said on Monday. The group said it expected to close

Forvia to sell its interiors business to Apollo Funds for $2.1 billion

Key Details of the Forvia-Apollo Funds Deal

Transaction Overview

April 27 (Reuters) - Forvia will sell its car interiors business to Apollo Funds for 1.82 billion euros ($2.13 billion) to cut its debt pile, the French auto parts supplier said on Monday, sending its shares rising 3.5% in early trading.

Business Unit Profile

The unit, which supplies full instrument panel, door panel and centre console systems for cars, recorded 4.82 billion euros in sales in 2025, nearly 18% of the group total.

Timeline and Strategic Rationale

Forvia aims to close the sale by the end of this year. It had first announced it planned to sell parts of the unit last November as part of a broader push to reduce debt.

Background: Faurecia and Hella Merger

Since the 2022 merger of Faurecia and Hella created the world's seventh-largest automotive supplier by revenue, Forvia has made deleveraging and divestments one of its priorities.

Financial Impact of the Sale

Debt Reduction and Leverage Targets

It expects the divestment to help lower its net debt by 1 billion euros and its gross debt by 1.4 billion euros, CEO Martin Fischer said in a call with journalists. The net debt was 6 billion euros at the end of 2025.

Leverage Ratio Outlook

The car part supplier also expects to reduce its leverage ratio, so that the net debt will be equal to 1.2 times its earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation by 2028, compared with 1.7 times in 2025.

Market Context and Management Comments

"As the market circumstances have really deteriorated, if the Middle East crisis, it is good that we could attain that kind of price point and then also the debt effect that we had foreseen and communicated already months ago," Fischer said.

Transition of Interiors Business

The entire interiors business, including its leadership team, 31,000 employees, 59 manufacturing sites and eight research and development centres will be moved into the new ownership, Fischer added.

Leadership Changes

Forvia also said the chair of its board of directors, Michel de Rosen, had resigned and would be replaced by Pierre André de Chalendar after the company's annual general meeting on June 4.

($1 = 0.8530 euros)

(Reporting by Mathias de Rozario in Gdansk, editing by Milla Nissi-Prussak)

Key Takeaways

  • The sale of Forvia’s Interiors unit supports its IGNITE transformation plan focused on high‑value, technology‑driven growth and financial deleveraging (globenewswire.com)
  • The Interiors business accounts for ~18 % of Forvia’s 2025 revenue, with ~€4.8 billion in revenues, 59 plants, 8 R&D centers, and over 31,000 employees in 19 countries (globenewswire.com)
  • Upon closing, net proceeds will reduce Forvia’s net debt by at least €1 billion and reinforce its balance sheet flexibility as it zeroes in on core growth areas (globenewswire.com)

References

Frequently Asked Questions

Who is buying Forvia's interiors business?
Apollo Funds is purchasing Forvia's interiors business for 1.82 billion euros ($2.1 billion).
How much is Forvia selling its interiors business for?
Forvia is selling its interiors business for 1.82 billion euros, equivalent to approximately $2.1 billion.
When is the Forvia and Apollo Funds deal expected to close?
The deal is expected to close by the end of the year.
Where is Forvia based?
Forvia is a French car parts supplier.

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