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End of the road as carmaker Saab files for bankruptcy
by Staff Writers
Stockholm (AFP) Dec 19, 2011


Saab Automobile filed for bankruptcy on Monday, bringing to an end two years of efforts to rescue the iconic brand which has been the hallmark of Swedish cars for six decades.

The final desperate attempts to raise funds in China were frustrated by Saab's former owner General Motors which still holds key licences.

Saab's owner Swedish Automobile said in a statement that "the company without further funding will be insolvent and that filing bankruptcy is in the best interests of its creditors.

The court approved the filing several hours later and appointed receivers for Saab Automobile.

Swedish Automobile's charismatic chief executive Victor Muller had been due in court on Monday to determine whether to lift or extend the three-month bankruptcy protection Saab had been placed under while it was attempting to negotiate a rescue deal.

Muller had struggled to clinch an agreement in recent months with two Chinese groups, carmaker Youngman and car distribution company Pang Da.

But GM repeatedly said it would refuse to agree to the necessary technology licence transfers to the Chinese firms and Pang Da pulled out of the negotiations a few weeks ago.

GM owns the rights to Saab's models 9-3, 9-5 and 9-4X.

As recently as this weekend, GM reiterated its opposition to any deal with a Chinese suitor, a statement seen as the death knell for Saab.

"Each proposal results either directly or indirectly in the transfer of control and/or ownership of the company in a manner that would be detrimental to GM and its shareholders. As such, GM cannot support any of these proposed alternatives," GM spokesman James Cain said.

Swedish Automobile said Youngman pulled out following Cain's remarks.

"In the end, the complete lack of cooperation from GM was a big problem," Muller told a press conference at Saab's main plant in Trollhaettan, Sweden, adding that he had lost some 13 million euros of his own money in Saab.

He said, however "there are parties out there that have expressed an interest in Saab.

"Although this may seem like the end, it may not necessarily be so. There could be a new beginning, a possibility for Saab to rise like a phoenix out of the ashes," he added.

The attempts to sell Saab to Chinese partners were seen as the last chance of saving the carmaker, which was already on the brink of bankruptcy when GM sold it to Swedish Automobile -- at the time called Spyker -- in early 2010 for $400 million (308 million euros).

It has been a rocky road since then.

Saab -- which began life in 1937 as an aircraft manufacturer, something which became evident in the aerodynamic, sporty shape of its first concept car designs -- was forced to halt production in April as suppliers stopped deliveries over mountains of unpaid bills.

Its funds ultimately ran out and Saab's 3,700 employees did not receive their November paychecks.

Employees and union officials were dejected after Monday's news.

"It's so sad," Ulf Drufva, who has worked at the Trollhaettan plant for 39 years, told Swedish news agency TT.

He said GM's blocking of the Chinese deal was "strange."

"It's as if GM sees Saab as a threat. And I can't understand that, as small as we are."

The head of the IF Metall union, Stefan Loefven, said bankruptcy was a tragedy for the employees and voiced hope that a buyer would save Saab intact.

"A scenario where the company is divided up is much worse and a lot more jobs risk being lost," he told TT.

The head of Trollhaettan city council, Paul Aakerlund, who was formerly the head union representative of Saab's branch of IF Metall, said there was still hope for the town's carmaking future.

"I know there are parties who want to buy all of Saab and run the business in Trollhaettan."

Others were less optimistic.

"I would be very surprised if anyone wanted to take over Saab," Lars Holmqvist, the chief executive of the European Association of Automotive Suppliers, told TT.

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After 60 years, Saab cars end in bankruptcy
Stockholm (AFP) Dec 19, 2011 - Saab Automobile's decision to file for bankruptcy on Monday ends two years of efforts to save the loss-making company that began as an aircraft manufacturer and then rolled out cars for 60 years.

Saab was founded in 1937 with government assistance to make airplanes in the pre-war years -- something which later became evident in the aerodynamic, sporty shape of its first concept car designs.

Saab AB, a separate company, continues to this day to make fighter jets, commuter planes and defence systems.

After the end of the war, Saab Automobile built its first prototype cars in 1947, with the first production version rolling off the assembly line two years later.

In 1969, Saab Automobile linked up with Swedish truckmaker Scania, becoming Saab-Scania.

Saab's glory years came in the 1980s when a weak Swedish krona helped boost sales in its export markets, the US and Britain, where it gained a reputation for its pioneering turbocharging technology.

But by the end of the 1980s it had encountered financial difficulties, and after three straight years of losses, US auto giant General Motors bought 50 percent of Saab Automobile from Saab-Scania in 1990.

Ten years later it snapped up the remaining 50 percent, making it a wholly-owned GM subsidiary.

The US company wanted a premium marque to add to its wide range of brands, while Saab would gain better economies of scale by being part of a larger company.

But in almost two decades of GM ownership, it made a profit only one year, in 2001 -- the last time it was in the black.

An ageing product line and a collapse in demand owing to the tightening of available credit hurt Saab's sales in recent years.

Saab employees told AFP in 2009 that the US parent company did not invest enough money in new products during its tenure as owner, and this weakened sales.

GM was hard hit by the 2008-2009 global economic crisis and needed to shore up its own badly-damaged balance sheet: it sold Saab in early 2010 to Dutch niche carmaker Spyker, now called Swedish Automobile, for 400 million dollars.

Spyker's ambitious plan for Saab aimed to turn a profit in 2012, with among the launch of a new 9-3 model, but those goals turned out to be too optimistic.

Saab initially planned to sell 50,000 cars in 2010 and 100,000 in 2011, but ended up selling a total of just 32,000.

The company, which has its main production headquarters in Trollhaettan, a town of just 55,000 inhabitants in southwest Sweden, was forced to halt production in April 2011 as suppliers stopped deliveries over mountains of unpaid bills.

Saab's 3,700 employees saw their wages delayed for five months in a row and did not receive their November paychecks, as the company was out of money.

Swedish Automobile scrambled to negotiate deals with several potential buyers to raise the cash needed to save the carmaker from bankruptcy, including talks with Chinese carmaker Youngman and car distributor Pang Da.

Those talks failed when GM blocked the necessary technology licence transfers to the Chinese firms, signalling the end for Saab.



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