Interest from Michal Strnad and Pavel Tykač in part of Sinochem’s Pirelli holding could return a strategic European manufacturer to greater European ownership while testing Italy’s limits on Chinese influence.
Czech businessmen Michal Strnad and Pavel Tykač are interested in acquiring part of Chinese state-owned Sinochem’s stake in Italian tyre manufacturer Pirelli, according to reporting based on discussions with the parties.
Sinochem is Pirelli’s largest shareholder with 34.1 per cent. The reported Czech interest has not yet produced a publicly confirmed transaction, and the size, price and structure remain uncertain.
The potential deal matters because Italy has already used its golden-power rules to limit Sinochem’s influence over Pirelli, particularly where tyre technology and vehicle data intersect with national security.
More than a tyre company
Modern premium tyres incorporate sensors, software and data used by vehicle-control systems. Pirelli’s technology, brand and relationships with European carmakers give the company strategic relevance beyond conventional manufacturing.
Rome’s concern has focused on whether a Chinese state-owned shareholder could gain access to sensitive technology or shape management decisions. Italy imposed governance restrictions rather than forcing a full divestment.
A partial sale to European investors could reduce that tension without removing Sinochem entirely. It may also simplify Pirelli’s strategic choices in markets where Chinese ownership attracts regulatory scrutiny.
The possible buyers bring strategic weight
Strnad controls Czechoslovak Group, a rapidly growing defence manufacturer with assets in Italy including Fiocchi ammunition. Tykač owns the Sev.en energy group.
Their interest would bring capital linked to defence and energy into a company central to automotive supply chains. That could be viewed as a return of ownership to European hands, but regulators would still examine financing, governance and the buyers’ long-term intentions.
The proposed stake is reported to be a portion rather than all of Sinochem’s holding. The effect on control would depend on voting agreements and Pirelli’s other major shareholders.
Europe is reassessing Chinese stakes
European governments welcomed Chinese capital into industrial companies when access to finance and the Chinese market appeared to outweigh security concerns. The balance has shifted as relations with Beijing become more competitive.
Investment screening now pays closer attention to technology, data and supply chains. EU Global has reported how Western governments are debating stronger tools to reduce critical dependencies on China. Pirelli belongs to the related question of ownership in established European manufacturers.
The challenge is to apply scrutiny consistently rather than retroactively politicising every Chinese investment. Shareholder nationality alone does not prove improper control. Specific rights, access and strategic risk should guide intervention.
A deal would signal a wider realignment
If Sinochem sells a meaningful portion, it may reflect regulatory pressure, commercial calculation or both. For Italy, a European buyer could reduce security concerns while preserving Pirelli’s access to global capital and markets.
For China, the transaction would be another sign that ownership positions once treated as ordinary commercial investments now face political limits.
No agreement has been announced, and speculative interest should not be presented as an accomplished transfer. The strategic direction is nevertheless clear: control over European industrial assets is being reconsidered through the lens of economic security.
Pirelli’s shareholder register may become a small but revealing part of that wider European realignment.



