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Saab owner breaks off Chinese funding deal: company
by Staff Writers
Stockholm (AFP) Oct 24, 2011


Swedish Automobile, the Dutch owner of beleaguered Swedish carmaker Saab, said late Sunday it had broken off a deal for funding with two Chinese firms, seen as the only hope of keeping Saab out of bankruptcy.

Swedish Automobile (Swan) wrote in a statement that it had "given notice of termination with immediate effect of the subscription agreement of July 2011, entered into by Swan, Pang Da and Youngman."

Swan confirmed last week that the two Chinese companies, which in July agreed to inject 245 million euros ($335 million) into Saab in exchange for about half the carmaker, had instead offered to buy the whole company.

Swan said Friday it had rejected that offer and that it instead was trying to confirm the July deal.

Late Sunday, it said it had terminated the deal "in view of the fact that Pang Da and Youngman failed to confirm their commitment to the subscription agreement."

The Dutch firm also lamented that its Chinese partners had failed to honour a deal to provide bridge financing of 70 million euros to Saab while it undergoes a three-month restructuring process that began in September.

According to Swedish daily Svenska Dagbladet, Pang Da and Youngman have meanwhile offered a mere 200 million kronor ($30.4 million, 21.9 million euros) to buy all of Saab.

Swan did not confirm the amount offered, saying only that it was "unacceptable to Swan," but adding that "discussions between the parties are ongoing."

Saab's court-appointed administrator, Guy Lofalk, said after learning the carmaker's financing had fallen through that he no longer thought the reorganisation would be successful and called for the process and the bankruptcy protection to be halted.

The Vaenersborg court in southwestern Sweden has until the end of this week to decide whether to grant his petition.

If it does, numerous requests for Saab to be declared bankrupt, which have been put on ice during the reorganisation, will be reactivated.

Saab, which was rescued from the brink of bankruptcy in early 2010 when Swan (then known as Spyker) bought it from US giant General Motors for 400 million dollars.

Since then, however, it has traveled an increasingly rocky road, with production at its Trollhaettan factory in southwestern Sweden halted almost continuously since April as suppliers stopped deliveries over mountains of unpaid bills.

Before Saab entered bankruptcy protection last month, many of its some 3,700 employees had seen their salary payments significantly delayed for three straight months.

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Exports drive growth in China's car market: report
Beijing (AFP) Oct 24, 2011 - The growth of China's car market will be driven primarily by exports this year because domestic sales have slowed dramatically, state media reported on Monday.

China -- the world's largest car market -- sold 614,000 cars abroad in the first nine months of 2011, a 60 percent rise on the same period last year, the China Business News daily said.

"The export market has this year become the main driver of growth for car sales in China," it said, forecasting sales for the year would reach 800,000.

China overtook the United States in 2009 to become the world's largest car market, but the sector has since lost some steam after the government phased out most sales incentives ushered in to ward off the worldwide economic downturn.

In the first nine months of this year, manufacturers sold 13.6 million cars in China -- just 3.6 percent more than in the same period a year earlier.

Industry forecasts put growth for the full year at around five percent over last year, well down from a 32 percent year-over-year growth rate in 2010.

China said last week its economic growth had slowed to 9.1 percent in the third quarter, the lowest rate in two years, as government efforts to tame inflation and turbulence in Europe and the United States curbed activity.



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What makes tires grip the road on a rainy day?
Heidelberg, Germany (SPX) Oct 24, 2011
A team of scientists from Italy and Germany has recently developed a model to predict the friction occurring when a rough surface in wet conditions (such as a road on a rainy day) is in sliding contact with a rubber material (such as a car tire tread block) in an article to be published shortly in the Springer journal EPJE. In their study, B.N.J. Persson from the Julich Research Center in ... read more


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