Saab lives! Maybe...

Started by Denis, January 26, 2010, 01:50:11 PM

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Denis

GM to sell Saab to Dutch carmaker Spyker for $74M

DETROIT – Saab got a new life Tuesday as General Motors Co. agreed to sell the Swedish car brand to the small Dutch luxury carmaker Spyker Cars NV.
Under the deal, GM will get $74 million in cash plus $326 million worth of preferred shares in Saab. GM will get "other considerations," which it did not specify. The Swedish government is also ready to guarantee a loan of up to 4 billion kronor ($550 million) from the European Investment Bank, Industry Minister Maud Olofsson said.
The deal is a coup for Spyker and a lifeline for Saab, which has lost money for years under GM's ownership and was slated for liquidation. Saab has around 3,500 employees in Sweden.
But it's also a huge challenge for Spyker, which sold only 23 cars in the first half of 2009, its most recent reporting period, and posted a net loss of 8.7 million euros. The 11-year-old company has yet to make a profit, but it says funding for its operations have been guaranteed through 2010.
Spyker CEO Victor Muller said in a statement that the company is happy to have saved the brand and secured the jobs of thousands of workers.
"Saab is an iconic brand that we are honored to shepherd," he said in the statement, adding that support from many of the 1.5 million Saab drivers worldwide helped get the deal done.
Saab spokeswoman Gunilla Gustavs said "We are very happy" about the sale.
Under the deal, GM will continue to provide engines and transmissions for the new company for "an extended period of time," and it will keep making the 9-4X crossover vehicle for Saab, said John Smith, GM's vice president of planning and alliances. Crossovers have the interior room of an SUV but are built on a car instead of a truck frame.
GM hopes to close the deal by mid-February, Smith said.
Spyker will continue to provide vehicles for and support Saab's U.S. dealers, Smith said. The Dutch automaker also will guarantee up to $10 million in Saab's obligations to GMAC, which is GM's financing arm.
Sweden's Olofsson said the government made the decision to back the loan on Tuesday after analyzing a review of Spyker's business plan and financial situation by the Swedish National Debt Office and consulting firm KPMG. She said the money must be used for projects to develop environmentally friendly cars in Sweden.
If the European Investment Bank loan is approved it will be paid out in installments, not as a lump sum, she said.
But she said the biggest challenge remains for Saab: to develop cars that customers want and "deliver a solid profit."
GM has been trying to shed Saab for more than a year as part of a massive restructuring process after it emerged from bankruptcy protection. The company also plans to sell Hummer and will phase out Saturn and Pontiac so it can focus on four brands: Chevrolet, Buick, GMC and Cadillac.
Saab Automobile sold around 90,000 cars in 2008, a 30 percent decline from 2007. With another sharp sales decline expected, it filed for protection from creditors while it reorganized in February 2009.
Saab's U.S. sales last year amounted to only 8,680, down 59 percent from 2008 as consumers stayed away from the brand due to uncertainty over its future.
GM filed for bankruptcy itself in June, and previous attempts to sell Saab by a Dec. 31 deadline failed.
To win the bidding process, Spyker had to overcome reservations within GM that it didn't have the expertise to run a car company. Several GM executives were afraid of getting tangled up with the Dutch automaker because GM will at least for a short time have to continue providing vehicles for Saab.
Spyker bested Luxembourg private equity group Genii Capital to win the bidding for Saab. Genii withdrew from the bidding Monday, saying "the timing of the bidding process for Saab is incompatible with implementing a solid business platform for the future."
Why did Salvador Dali cross the road?
Clocks.

Basvarken

My collegue made this on his blog a few weeks ago...
seems appropriate ;)


www.brooksbassguitars.com
www.thegibsonbassbook.com

Pilgrim

I think Spyker has more potential for success with Saab than with their other creations.  Good luck to them!

Getting $$ for Saab instead of closing it is one of the most intelligent things GM has done recently.
"A computer lets you make more mistakes faster than any other invention with the possible exceptions of handguns and tequila."

uwe

Now that Volvo is Chinese, should I be looking for a dutch-owned Swedish carmaker?
We've taken too much for granted ... and all the time it had grown ...
From techno seeds we first planted ... evolved a mind of its own ...

Pilgrim

Quote from: uwe on January 26, 2010, 03:51:01 PM
Now that Volvo is Chinese, should I be looking for a dutch-owned Swedish carmaker?

??? ???  :P
"A computer lets you make more mistakes faster than any other invention with the possible exceptions of handguns and tequila."

Dave W

I hope it works for them.

GM paid well over $500 million back in the day and that was only for 50% ownership. I guess US taxpayers get to subsidize the loss.

Freuds_Cat

On November 13, 2005, Spyker Cars and Mubadala Development Company (a principal investment company wholly owned by the Government of Abu Dhabi) announced their strategic alliance with Mubadala acquiring 17% of Spyker.

Arab/Dutch/American/Swedish/English(Spyker manufacturing plant)/German(Audi supplies engines for the Spyker cars). What a true multi cultural vehicle the SAAB is turning into.
Digresion our specialty!

uwe

I'm happy for them, hope it works.
We've taken too much for granted ... and all the time it had grown ...
From techno seeds we first planted ... evolved a mind of its own ...

Highlander

Quote from: uwe on January 26, 2010, 03:51:01 PM
Now that Volvo is Chinese, should I be looking for a dutch-owned Swedish carmaker?

Does this mean you want to "appropriate" their cars instead of bikes from now on...?  ;)
The random mind of a Silver Surfer...
If research was easy, it wouldn't need doing...
Staring at that event horizon is a dirty job, but someone has to do it; something's going to come back out of it one day...

uwe

Naw, we always paid for the iron ore we got from Sweden in WW II. Very helpful those Swedes.

My last five cars have all been Volvo: 480, 850, V 70, XC 70, XC 90 (a mistake) and back to a V 70 now. The Ford takeover did them no harm (in fact the contrary), let's see how the Chinese pan out. It will open Volvo the huge Chinese market where they haven't had much of a presence so far.
We've taken too much for granted ... and all the time it had grown ...
From techno seeds we first planted ... evolved a mind of its own ...

Denis

I love my '93 240 wagon and if Volvo had gotten the viscous coupling setup right on the first Cross Countrys I'd own one of those.
Why did Salvador Dali cross the road?
Clocks.