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: Geely buys Volvo


Gt-R R34
03-28-2010, 02:21 PM
GOTHENBURG, Sweden (Reuters) - Zhejiang Geely Holding Group, China's largest private-run car maker, agreed on Sunday to buy Ford Motor's Volvo car unit for $1.8 billion, the country's biggest overseas auto purchase.

The takeover underscores China's arrival as a major force in the global auto industry and ends nearly two years of talks with Geely over Volvo -- the last sale from Ford's former premier group, which also held Aston Martin, Jaguar and Land Rover.

"Today represents a milestone in the history of Geely," Geely chairman Li Shufu told a news conference, adding that Volvo Cars would remain a separate company with its own management team based in Sweden.

Such a deal would have been nearly unimaginable a few years ago for the Chinese carmaker, which on 2009 forecasts has a turnover of only 16 percent of Volvo's, and has just over half the workforce.

The deal highlights in particular the big opportunities that have emerged from the financial crisis for smaller players. Tiny Dutch sports car maker Spyker clinched a deal in January to buy Sweden's Saab from General Motors Co .

Geely said it had secured all the necessary financing to complete the deal, though it remained open to a possible loan from the European Investment Bank.

Addressing questions regarding Geely's plans to keep production lines running in Europe, Li said it was important Volvo stayed close to key supply centers.

"I have a deep belief that the manufacturing footprint in Gothenburg and Belgium will be preserved in the longer term," he said.

Volvo labor unions, which had been critical of the proposed deal and complained about a lack of information about the future of the company, said they now backed the takeover.

A "FAIR PRICE"

The deal, which both sides aim to close in the third quarter, will help free up cash for the number two U.S. automaker and enable it to focus on its core Ford brand.

Geely, parent of Geely Automobile Holdings , was named by Ford as the preferred bidder for its loss-making Swedish unit in October 2009.

The Chinese carmaker clinched Volvo at a price tag well below the $6.5 billion Ford paid for it in 1999.

"We think it's a fair price for a good business," Ford Motor's Chief Financial Officer Lewis Booth told the news conference.

China raced past the U.S. to become the world's top auto market last year, with sales surging 46 percent to a record 13.6 million units. It is keen to move into Western markets but has so far lacked the technology and brand recognition to do so.

The Volvo deal should help the Chinese carmaker to get around some of those obstacles more quickly.

BEIJING BOOST

Geely's chairman is already planning a factory in Beijing which will make 300,000 Volvo branded cars, or as many Volvos for China as are now made abroad for foreigners.

Unlike General Motors' failed deal to sell its gas-guzzling Hummer brand to Tengzhong, a little known Chinese machinery maker, Geely's Volvo purchase has been backed by Beijing.

Made-in-China Volvo may get a boost from Beijing's plan to support domestic brands and replace Volkswagen AG's Audi A6 as Chinese state officials' car of choice.

"We want to stabilize and enhance the traditional markets in Europe and North America, and at the same time develop the other Volvo business in emerging markets, including China," Li said.

The carmaker has already announced an aggressive target of boosting its sales to 2 million vehicles by 2015 from last year's roughly 330,000 units -- about the same as Volvo's global output.

(Additional reporting and writing by Mia Shanley and Niklas Pollard in Stockholm, editing by Will Waterman)



Wonder how these cars wil turn out

twitchyzero
03-28-2010, 02:31 PM
nooo!
i'm surprised it's only worth 1.8b
good thing they'll keep management and the plants in europe

tool001
03-29-2010, 07:58 AM
nooo!
i'm surprised it's only worth 1.8b
good thing they'll keep management and the plants in europe

yeh because, most people wont buy the car if it were made in china

Mugen EvOlutioN
03-29-2010, 08:31 AM
no one dares

q0192837465
03-29-2010, 12:03 PM
i wonder if China will force cost cutting on Volvo?

twitchyzero
03-29-2010, 12:40 PM
yeh because, most people wont buy the car if it were made in china

you'll have quite a few loyalists leaving the brand if they decided to make their cars in chinese plants

i'm sure same thing happened when MB started to mfg some of their fleets in mexico

RollingStone
03-29-2010, 04:48 PM
you'll have quite a few loyalists leaving the brand if they decided to make their cars in chinese plants

i'm sure same thing happened when MB started to mfg some of their fleets in mexico

And Mercedes is doing just fine now.

I think as long as they produce good cars, most buyers won't care where its made.

twitchyzero
03-29-2010, 05:52 PM
but MB is under daimler..not a chinese company so the QC is still acceptable

asian_XL
03-29-2010, 07:21 PM
yeh because, most people wont buy the car if it were made in china

:facepalm:

they own Volvo, doesn't mean it is made in China.

Geely is keeping ALL the employees located in Sweden, which is one of their agreements with the union.

notching
03-29-2010, 07:32 PM
http://images.thetruthaboutcars.com/2009/03/china_flag_large_opta.jpg

:Popcorn

Shun Izaki
03-29-2010, 08:01 PM
A little piece of kardboard just died...

tool001
03-29-2010, 08:02 PM
:facepalm:

they own Volvo, doesn't mean it is made in China.

Geely is keeping ALL the employees located in Sweden, which is one of their agreements with the union.

can u read?? i said if they moved the production line to china.... learn to read..

Geely is smart enough to know that, if they moved production line, they would lose out...

Pumbaa
03-30-2010, 01:00 AM
I think this would benefit Geely mostly, now they can just learn from Volvo.
Hopefully, Geely can invest like Tata did with Jaguar.