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GENERAL MOTORS

Deal to save Saab unlikely: GM head

The CEO of General Motors (GM) expressed doubts on Wednesday about the likelihood of a last-minute deal to save Saab Automobile from being shut down.

Deal to save Saab unlikely: GM head
GM Chairman and CEO Edward Whitacre Jr.

GM extended a deadline to consider offers for Saab last month after Dutch sports car maker Spyker approached the US automaker with a last ditch proposal.

But GM chairman and chief executive officer Ed Whitacre told reporters that he was “not confident” a deal could be made “given what’s happening here and the speed with which it’s moving.”

“It’s real easy, just show up with the money and you can have it,” Whitacre said.

“But nobody’s shown up with the money so we’re in wind-down mode here.”

Spyker’s efforts to purchase Saab came after interest from Swedish luxury sports car maker Koenigsegg, which withdrew its bid for Saab in November, citing costly delays in the transaction.

But Whitacre dismissed critics who said GM was giving up too easily on the historic Swedish brand.

“I don’t think we could do any more than we’ve done. I think we’ve done everything possible.”

The Swedish government has repeatedly said it will not bail out the Trollhättan-based company, which directly employs around 3,400 people, but would help workers re-skill.

Analysts have warned that some 8,000 jobs could be lost with Saab’s closure.

Saab, which has barely turned a profit in two decades under GM management, was due to resume production on January 11 after a four-week shutdown as part of plans to close the plant.

Saab’s closure would be just the latest upheaval in Sweden’s once blooming auto industry.

In December, US auto giant Ford agreed to sell its Swedish brand Volvo Cars to Chinese car maker Geely.

Ford said the Geely deal would provide Volvo, which employs 22,000 people worldwide, with the resources “to further strengthen the business and build its global franchise.”

Saab is one of four storied brands that GM is shedding as part of a massive restructuring effort that began in 2005 and accelerated last year when the largest US automaker went bankrupt.

Whitacre said the sale of the hulking Hummer brand to China’s heavy machinery equipment maker Tengzhong is “proceeding as it should proceed.”

A sale of GM’s Saturn brand fell through earlier last year and GM also decided to eliminate Pontiac.

Whitacre told reporters that GM is focused on achieving long-term profitability, repaying its debt to the US government — which holds a 60 percent stake in GM — and launching an initial public stock offering.

“We’re in business to make a profit; we’re in business to repay taxpayers,” he said.

When asked if GM will be able to make a profit in 2010, Whitacre said “my prediction is we will be.”

“Do we have obstacles on our way? Of course we do,” he said.

“But I think we have a good enough management team… Hopefully the economy will keep improving.”

Whitacre said GM does not feel pressured to launch a stock offering this year but did not rule it out as a possibility.

“Things have to be right before we do it,” he said. “We have to get everything set up.”

Whitacre said he hopes that GM’s tarnished image will get a boost at the Detroit auto show which begins next week and will showcase the automaker’s “futuristic” new lineup.

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SAAB

Spyker to continue fight for GM Saab pay out

Dutch car builder Spyker on Thursday said it will appeal the dismissal of its $3.0 billion claim in a US court against General Motors, which Spyker accuses of deliberately bankrupting Sweden's Saab in 2011.

Spyker to continue fight for GM Saab pay out

“Spyker… shall appeal the ruling of the District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan,” in favour of GM, the plaintiff car group Spyker said in a short statement from its headquarters in the central Dutch town of Zeewolde.

It did not give any further details.

Spyker filed a lawsuit in August claiming $3 billion in damages.

It alleged that GM criminally interfered in an operation that could have made it possible for Saab, which Spyker bought in 2010, to restructure and stay afloat, because the US automaker wanted to dominate the Chinese market.

Saab, a former GM subsidiary, filed for bankruptcy in December 2011 after teetering on the edge of the abyss for almost two years. A last-ditch bid to raise funds in China, with the Youngman group, was blocked by GM over issues concerning the transfer of technology.

Chinese carmaker Youngman had long been interested in buying Saab and tried

to snap it up before it declared bankruptcy — but its efforts were stymied by Saab’s former owner, GM, which balked at transferring the necessary technology

licences.

At the time, Spyker’s chief executive Victor Muller said that the $3 billion claim in compensation represented the value which Saab would have represented had the deal with Youngman gone through, but analysts at the time were sceptical whether the suit would succeed.

GM in its response to the claim denied any criminal action or intent, saying Saab had granted it a contractual right to agree, or not, to the transaction proposed by Spyker.

The US carmaker sold Saab in 2010 to Spyker. A deal reached parallel to the sale allowed Saab to keep using GM technologies and keep production going, but allowed GM to stop the arrangement if Saab changed hands.

GM has maintained that Spyker bought Saab “knowing its financial history, and subject to terms spelled out unambiguously in the arrangements attached to the complaint.”

“Those agreements include clear contractual limitations in the future use of GM’s technology, and on the transfer of technology to others,” GM said in a document, filed before the court a month after Spyker filed the claim.

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