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Saab staff on hold as cash search continues

Cash-strapped Swedish car maker Saab told staff on Wednesday that they were not needed back at work as the search for financing continues to enable the firm to restart production lines left idle for over three weeks.

The employees “were given an update on the situation” and told to continue to stay home because “the production line is not able to run normally,” spokesperson Gunilla Gustavs told AFP, explaining Wednesday’s staff meeting had been planned since last week.

Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt and Enterprise Minister Maud Olofsson meanwhile both reiterated Wednesday that the Swedish state did not plan to jump in and save Saab if it is unable to secure the financing it needs to stay afloat.

“We have done as much as we could,” Olofsson told news agency TT.

Saab was rescued at the last minute in January 2010 by Spyker, which bought it for $400 million dollars from GM and vowed to preserve the iconic carmaker.

But sales did not reach expectations, losses ballooned, and the company announced on April 6 this year it was stopping production “until further notice” as suppliers have halted deliveries due to unpaid bills.

Spyker has been trying to sell Saab Property – which includes the company’s plant in Trollheattan, western Sweden – to quickly raise the funds it urgently needed to start up production again.

Last week, the Swedish government gave the green light for the deal, allowing Sweden’s National Debt Office to release its security in Saab Property used to guaranteed a €400 million ($590 million) EIB loan to Saab.

The government however said the deal still needed approval from the European bank.

Spyker said Tuesday the EIB had imposed new, strict conditions on Saab, its former owner and shareholder General Motors, the Swedish National Debt Office (NDO) and the Swedish government.

“It is not yet certain whether the above parties will be able to fulfil all of the conditions of the EIB and finalise the sale of Saab Property within a short time frame,” Spyker said.

Because of the current situation, Spyker and Saab are continuing to work on securing additional funding and possible new partners include “various Chinese

car manufacturers,” it added in a statement.

“It is now an issue for the EIB and Saab to agree on. As in all banking transactions, the bank and the company have to agree,” Olofsson said.

Reinfeldt agreed.

“I have no reason to speculate on what the future holds. But it is absolutely crucial for every company … to create products and services that are attractive in each respective market. That can only be done by the company itself,” he said, adding he was worried for the employees.

Olofsson also mentioned the issue of ownership changes at Saab were being dealt with by the NDO.

Russian billionnaire Vladimir Antonov – a former Spyker shareholder who was ousted from taking a stake it Saab when Spyker purchased it – met with the NDO Tuesday about becoming a Saab shareholder.

Antonov is also the investor waiting to purchase Saab Property. He said in March he was ready to invest €50 million in Saab and would want to take a 30-percent stake in the company.

At the weekend, his spokesman in Sweden Lars Carlström complained to Swedish media that stringent EIB conditions were stalling the financing access.

“I can’t see any other explanation than that they want to sink Saab, for Saab to go bankrupt,” Carlström said, referring to rumoured EIB repayment conditions, including a requirement for Saab to repay the full amount of its loan within 90 days.

In its 20 years as part of GM, Saab never turned a profit.

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CEO

Volkswagen sacks CEO Müller after less than 3 years in job: report

Scandal-hit car giant Volkswagen said Tuesday it has sacked its chief executive Matthias Müller, German media report.

Volkswagen sacks CEO Müller after less than 3 years in job: report
Matthias Müller. Photo: DPA

“The Volkswagen group is considering further evolving the leadership structure, which could be connected with changes in the board… a change to the chief executive could be involved,” VW said in a statement.

Both Handelsblatt and Reuters report that Müller has been removed from his post.

Supervisory board chief Hans Dieter Poetsch had been “speaking with different members of the supervisory and executive boards” about moving or replacing some of them, the statement went on, adding that Müller “signalled he was open to play a part in the changes.”

Handelsblatt reported that Herbert Diess, head of the VW brand — one of the group's 12 makes of cars, trucks and motorbikes — was slated to take Müller's place.

Volkswagen did not respond immediately when contacted about the report.

Müller, a former chief executive of VW subsidiary Porsche, was brought in to replace Martin Winterkorn.

The longtime CEO quit after the firm admitted in 2015 to manipulating 11 million diesel vehicles worldwide to cheat regulatory emissions tests in a scandal that became known as “dieselgate.”

Müller has chivvied the mammoth carmaker into a massive restructuring, aiming to electrify many of its lines and slim down its massive operations over the coming decades.

But he himself has landed in prosecutors' sights over suspicions he may have known about the diesel cheating before it became public and failed in his duty to inform investors.

Last month, Müller said that chief executives of big companies deserved high pay because “one always has one foot in jail”.