France nets 9 billion euros in new corporate investments despite budget battles

By Leigh Thomas

PARIS (Reuters) -Companies have pledged to invest 9.2 billion euros ($10.7 billion) in France, the finance ministry said on Monday, as the government seeks to show that the euro zone’s second-biggest economy remains a top business destination despite political turmoil.

Companies building infrastructure for artificial intelligence have flagged the biggest outlays, although French firms in sectors from energy to health and agri-food also made commitments for the government-organised “Choose France” summit, modelled on President Emmanuel Macron’s annual meeting with global corporate leaders.

The new money adds to 21.2 billion euros flagged over the past year, bringing the total to 30.4 billion euros for 150 projects, the ministry said.

The biggest single investment came from French utility EDF and OpCore, a joint venture between telecoms group Iliad and InfraVia Capital Partners, who have begun exclusive negotiations to develop a hyperscale data centre worth 4 billion euros.

Super-computing firm Eclarion pledged 2.5 billion euros in investment, AI cloud provider Sesterce 1.5 billion euros and commercial real estate group Altarea “several billion euros” in data centres, the finance ministry said.

Macron’s pro-business agenda has frayed since a snap election last year produced a hung parliament, with opposition parties eager to undo his supply-side reforms. France has since lurched from crisis to crisis, struggling to pass its budget and leaving companies with little policy visibility, especially on taxes.

Corporate leaders have condemned lower-house votes to hike business taxes in the 2026 budget to plug France’s gaping deficit rather than cutting spending – the highest among developed economies.

In such an environment, “it takes real courage to keep moving ahead without wavering,” L’Oréal Chairman Jean-Paul Agon told a conference Thursday. “If you can succeed in France, you can succeed anywhere.”

Lawmakers have added billions in tax hikes on top of those in the government’s draft budget, though the Senate may strike some down in coming weeks.

Finance Minister Roland Lescure sought to reassure executives that restoring public accounts would not rely solely on tax hikes.

“We need to have a budget, because political stability is valuable, but that will not come at any cost and not solely at the expense of businesses. Everyone must contribute,” he told journalists on the sidelines of the Choose France summit.

Despite recurring turmoil, France’s economy grew a faster-than-expected 0.5% in the third quarter, outpacing Germany and Italy thanks to surging exports and stronger investment. 

($1 = 0.8618 euros)

(Reporting by Leigh Thomas; Editing by Sudip Kar-Gupta and Lincoln Feast.)