Spanish Government Seeks Indra Chairman's Ouster, Report Says
Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on March 17, 2026
2 min readLast updated: March 17, 2026

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on March 17, 2026
2 min readLast updated: March 17, 2026

Spain’s government has urged SEPI to remove Indra chairman Ángel Escribano amid concerns over his bid for Indra’s takeover of his family’s firm EM&E, prompting an 8% drop in Indra shares.
March 17 (Reuters) - Spain's government has urged state holding company SEPI to dismiss the chairman of defence company Indra following a dispute over his plan for it to take over his family firm, Spanish news website El Confidencial reported on Tuesday.
Shares in Indra fell by about 8% following the report, leaving the company at the bottom of the Stoxx 600 index. They were down 6.2% at 1235 GMT.
Earlier this year, Chairman Angel Escribano began pursuing the acquisition of defence contractor Escribano Mechanical and Engineering, or EM&E.
Escribano owns half of EM&E while his brother, Javier, holds the other half and serves as its CEO.
In turn, the family firm has a 14.3% stake in Indra, making it the second-largest shareholder behind state-owned SEPI, which has a 28% stake.
According to the report, which cited sources familiar with the matter, the government wants Escribano to step down before Indra's next board meeting on March 25.
Indra declined to comment on the report and EM&E did not immediately respond to Reuters' request for comment.
According to El Confidencial, Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez's most senior economic adviser met last week with the head of SEPI to request Escribano should step down. Indra CEO Jose Vicente de los Mozos was also present, the report added.
However, other sources told El Confidencial the Escribano brothers felt they had the backing of a majority of the board.
Escribano was named to the post in January 2025 after Indra's previous chairman, Marc Murtra, was picked to lead Telefonica, Spain's biggest telecom company.
(Reporting by Gemma Guasch; Editing by David Latona and Barbara Lewis)
The Spanish government is urging SEPI to dismiss Indra's chairman due to a dispute over his plan to have Indra acquire his family firm, EM&E.
Indra's shares fell by about 8% after the report, placing the company at the bottom of the Stoxx 600 index.
State-owned SEPI owns a 28% stake in Indra, while the Escribano family firm holds 14.3%.
The next Indra board meeting is scheduled for March 25.
The previous chairman, Marc Murtra, was selected to lead Telefonica, Spain’s largest telecom company.
Explore more articles in the Finance category
