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DEFENCE

Investor buys big in defence concern Saab

The Wallenberg-family controlled firm Investor has purchased 11.2 million b-shares, 10.2 percent of the capital, in defence concern Saab. The price tag comes in at 1.1 billion kronor ($150 million), according to a statement.

Before the purchase of the shares from UK defence firm BAE Systems, Investor owned 19.8 percent of the capital and 38 percent of the votes in the Swedish concern.

According to the Investor statement, BAE Systems plans to sell off its entire shareholding in Saab during 2010.

In 1995 Saab and BAE Systems formed a jointly owned company to develop the JAS 39 Gripen fighter aircraft. BAE Systems at the time bought 35 percent of Saab shares from Investor. The UK firm has since sold off some of the shares.

Over time the business interests of BAE Systems and Saab have gone their separate ways. Investor has pledged to support Saab’s continued restructuring, the firm said in its statement.

“In line with our stated strategy to strengthen ownership in our key investments, we have now acted on an opportunity to increase our ownership stake to what we consider to be an attractive price,” Investor CEO Börje Ekholm said.

The transaction will not result in any mandatory bid obligations, according to Oscar Stege Unger at Investor.

The share purchase was completed at 95.50 kronor per share; Thursday’s closing price for Saab amounted to 105.50 kronor.

“We have previously held 38 percent of Saab, so we have already secured an exception from mandatory bid regulations,” he told news agency TT.

Saab’s third major shareholder is one of the Wallenberg family foundations, with around 5 percent of the votes.

Investor has motivated increasing its stake in Saab in that “at these levels” it becomes an interesting financial deal, Oscar Stege Unger said. The deal furthermore follows a successive winding up of the cooperation between Saab and BAE Systems, which has continued over several years.

“They have in practice ceased, in as much as Saab manages the Gripen exports itself. There has also been a degree of overlapping between BAE and Saab in larger deals,” he said.

“Now BAE have decided that they do not see this as a strategic holding and want to pull out. We also think that it is good that we clarify the ownership structure,” he said.

BAE Systems also holds an interest in the European Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) project.

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DEFENCE

France recruits 1,800 extra staff to cyber warfare unit

The French defence ministry on Wednesday announced plans to significantly boost the country's four-year-old cyber warfare force, citing the "growing number and gravity" of hacking attacks on the country.

France recruits 1,800 extra staff to cyber warfare unit
French defence minister Florence Parly. Photo: Alain Jocard/AFP

The government had already planned to add an additional 1,100 recruits to a unit created in response to the growing number of cyber attacks on the West, mostly blamed on Russia and China.

Defence Minister Florence Parly told a cyber security conference in the city of Lille on Wednesday she had decided to go further to try make France “a cyber security champion”.

Warning of a “Cold War in cyberspace” she said she would hire an extra 770 cyber combattants on top of an additional 1,100 already planned, bringing the force’s staffing level to 5,000 by 2025.

France and other Western countries are alarmed over a growing number of increasingly aggressive cyber attacks, including data breaches and ransomware attacks, which typically see hackers encrypting victims’ data and then demanding money for restored access.

Recent high-profile targets have included a US oil pipeline, Ireland’s health service and India’s flag carrier Air India.

Parly said that the French army needed to increase it use of the “cyber weapon”.

“Our opponents do not shy away from doing so, whether state powers, terrorist groups or their backers,” she said.

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