May 25, 2012
Published: 16 Jun 09 11:45 CET | Double click on a word to get a translation
Online: http://www.thelocal.se/20094/20090616/
Saab Automobile is to be sold to Swedish sports car maker Koenigsegg, Saab has confirmed.
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lång
adjective
Lång means long, tall and can be used for height, distance or time.
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It's just dawned on me that it will be made in Germany. What's the point? I might as well switch to BMW or Merc.
When I was considering driving the millionth mile in the SPG, I was proposing doing it in Sweden at the 2006 Convention, which I believe was actually held at that airbase, in Angleholm.
A car company not owned and destroyed by teh US.
There is a lesson the rest of Europe could learn from.
As for teh journalists who opposed the deal. Koenigsegg Group AB should remember there names and exclude them from everything.
Might be seen as a paradoxing thought so some, as me being an Asian ( Sri Lankan living most of my time in Sweden though) Yet, I like to see Saab in its Swedish heritage.
It could also be the high time that Saab expand it self into Asia. Just to be on the safe side. I'd like to see Sabbs rolling on our roads soon. :-)
... Koenigsegg only sells 18 cars a year with 45 employees ... SAAB turns out 18 cars in 2 hours!!!!!
Koenigsegg is a PR fig leaf covering Swedish modesty here ;o) ;o)
The real money behind the deal is a blend of GM (effectively paying to get out of SAAB via debt rescheduling etc - SAABs debt to GM is a staggering MSEK3 per SAAB employee!), and the Swedish government (pumping in over MSEK1.5 per direct SAAB job/TSEK320 per job (including SAAB suppliers) via loan guarantees, despite saying they wouldn't put in a penny to support a lost cause).
The main external financial backers are Norwegian.
The smart play remains to wind down volume production as soon as is allowed in the small print of the EIB/Swedish loan deal... and shrink the company to a lucrative spares business (with SAAB owners effectively forced to pay whatever price is charged by the Norwegians/Koenigsegg for essential spare parts) ... together with selling SAAB patents and design/engineering expertise to the highest bidders :-(
I am looking forward to Koenigsegg's touch on improving the appeal of SAAB. Also keeping SAAB's manufacture in Sweden in Trollhättan maintains the genuine heritage of SAAB which is strongly needed after GM's fiasco rebadging mix and match exercise.
SAAB makes cars that are thrilling to drive (e.g. Sonnet, 99 turbo, 93 Viggen, 93 Turbo X) and with Koenigsegg's involvement I believe they will be even more thrilling with all the high-tech needed to put that thrill to the road and control it properly (XWD system was needed for a while) and without loss of functionality and unique design.
Its far too early to be popping open the champers.
Save it for 5 or 6 years down the line.
There are huge debts,a continuing recession,a possible future lack of consumer confidence in Saab outside Sweden,cost of developing and gearing up for new models, which have to be desirable, attractive and most of all reliable right from the start.
There are so many uncertain and variable factors.
The first few years will be little more than a battle just to keep their heads above the water.
Its good to see a ray of light at the end of the tunnel and also the likely enthusiastic reception of the new products by the Swedes.
However success will be all down to how the rest of the World eventually rates the new products, if Saab can stay afloat that long.
It's become a case of national pride, influential people will ensure it's a success. How much it's going to cost the tax payer remains to be seen.
*none of mine though!*