Germany OK's Magna bid to acquire GM's Opel - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 06:16 PM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Business

Germany OK's Magna bid to acquire GM's Opel

The German government has approved a plan for Canadian-based auto parts company Magna International to acquire GM's Opel unit, the country's finance minister said.
An employee of General Motors' German unit Opel works on a Corsa at the Opel plant in the eastern German town of Eisenach earlier this month. ((Tobias Schwarz/Reuters))

The German governmenthas approved aplan for aconsortium bid led by Canadian-based auto parts company Magna International to acquire GM's Opel unit, the country's finance minister said Friday night.

Peer Steinbrueck said the agreement, whichwould see Opel put under the care of a trustee, was reached early Saturday.

Magna International Inc. chairman Frank Stronach talks to reporters in Berlin on Thursday. ((Canadian Press))

The consortium bid led by Aurora, Ont.-based Magna International, includes Russian lender Sberbank.

The German government will provide a $2.1-billion US bridge loan which will be available immediately.

According to the New York Times, under the terms of the deal, GM would retain a 35 per cent stake in the new company, with Sberbank taking 35 per cent, Magna holding 20 and Opels employees controlling the remaining 10 per cent.

The consortium plans to work together with Russian car maker Gaz to produce more than a million vehicles in Russia and Eastern Europe.

As part of the deal, all four factories in Germany will remain in operation, although Magna has said previously it will need to shedabout 2,500 jobs.

The German government has been seeking an agreement that would shield Opel from a looming bankruptcy filing by General Motors in the U.S. and extensive restructuring. Opel employs 25,000 people in Germany, nearly half of GM Europe's workforce.

GM is widely expected to file for bankruptcy protection in the U.S. on Monday.

Siegfried Wolf, a co-CEO of Magna, said he expected the agreements with GM would be signed in five weeks, but insisted that the deal struck early Saturday would prevent Opel from being touched by whateverhappens to GM.

"We really have taken the risk that was necessary to show a commitment, and we are committed, otherwise we wouldn't have done this deal," Wolf said.

With files from The Associated Press