Filed under: Hirings/Firings/Layoffs, Plants/Manufacturing, Saab, Earnings/Financials
After riding in on a white horse, Koenigsegg Group AB has pulled out of negotiations to buy Saab from General Motors, leaving the Swedish automaker’s future very much in doubt. In a brief statement issued by GM (available after the jump), president and CEO Fritz Henderson says that the company is “very disappointed with the decision to pull out of the Saab purchase.”
It is unclear what will happen to the brand now, but if Saab fans can hold on to any hope, GM says it will “take the next several days to assess the situation and will advise on the next steps next week.” It is worth noting that this is different from the brief announcement that GM issued when Roger Penske’s group pulled out from buying Saturn – GM immediately announced that they would begin “winding down” the brand. There was at least one other serious bidder interested in purchasing Saab previous to Koenigsegg becoming the preferred purchaser, but it isn’t immediately clear if they are still interested, or if their financial backing checked out to begin with.
We suspect that even if Saab is unable to survive as a brand, someone will step in and purchase the assets to the already tooled-up forthcoming 9-5 sedan – perhaps the Chinese – and potentially the newish 9-3/9-3X as well.
Gallery: 2010 Saab 9-5
[Source: General Motors]
Continue reading BREAKING: Koenigsegg backs out of Saab purchase, brand future up in the air
BREAKING: Koenigsegg backs out of Saab purchase, brand future up in the air originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 24 Nov 2009 11:27:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
