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GENERAL MOTORS

Spyker chief to preserve Saab’s ‘Swedishness’

Shortly after the announcement that his company was purchasing Saab Automobile, Spyker Cars CEO Victor Muller vowed to keep the "iconic" Saab brand afloat amid the current car industry crisis.

Spyker chief to preserve Saab's 'Swedishness'

“It’s been an incredible ride since we started the negotiations back in November,” Muller told a press conference in Stockholm shortly after General Motors announced a “binding agreement” to sell its high-end Saab division to Muller’s Spyker cars.

“The first thing that needs to happen is that Saab needs to learn to stand on its own feet. It’s been part of a very large conglomerate for very long and it’s going to be quite challenging to be absolutely responsible for everything yourself”, he said.

As part of the sales agreement, Spyker will form a new company, Saab Spyker Automobiles, which will carry the Saab nameplate forward.

“That company will in the future have two operating companies under the same roof that will be independent but working very closely together,” Muller said.

“It’s not so that Spyker will benefit immediately from being a sister company to Saab or vice-versa,” he warned, however praising GM for creating “an infrastructure and a business that is serious as can be” in its 20-year ownership of the Swedish brand.

Muller vowed to keep the identity of Saab and praised the network of dealers and brand enthusiasts who were quick to show their support for the brand GM said on December 18 it would wind down.

“The interest in Saab is basically very easy to understand, Saab is an iconic brand,” Muller said.

“The typical element of the Saab brand is its Swedishness…I think one would be very short-sighted to think that the Saab buyer would be very pleased to buy a Saab from Mumbai,” he added.

Muller said his current business plan for Saab did not foresee major job cuts but he did insist that the road ahead for the car industry was unpredictable.

“No industry was hit harder than the car industry. Assuming that everything develops according to plan, we will be good in terms of our staff,” he said.

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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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