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The American manufacturer General Motors (GM) took 50 percent ownership. Two well-known models to come out of this period were the Saab 9-3 and the Saab 9-5. Then, in 2000, GM exercised its option to acquire the remaining 50 percent. In 2010, GM sold Saab Automobile AB to the Dutch automobile manufacturer Spyker Cars N.V. [3] [4] Saab 900
From 1947, Saab started producing automobiles, the automobile division being spun off as Saab Automobile in 1990, a joint venture with General Motors. The joint venture ended in 2000 when GM took complete ownership. From 1968 onwards the company was in a merger with commercial vehicle manufacturer Scania-Vabis, known as Saab-Scania.
Saab Automobile was sold to Spyker Cars N.V. in 2010 after a deal between Spyker and then-current owner General Motors.After struggling to avoid insolvency throughout 2011, the company petitioned for bankruptcy following the failure of a Chinese consortium to complete a purchase of the company; the purchase had been blocked by former owner GM, which opposed the transfer of technology and ...
General Motors Corp. (GMGMQ), the bankrupt U.S. automaker that is jettisoning brands as it reorganizes, has unloaded Saab, the Swedish car company that tried for years to make inroads into the ...
Sweden has been in the news lately. And so has General Motors (GM). But you may not have known that the two intersect. That's because Swedish car-maker Saab is a GM subsidiary -- one that just ...
General Motor's 20-year relationship with Saab is nearly over. In a statement Tuesday, GM announced it has finalized the sale of Saab Automotive AB to Dutch luxury car company Spyker Cars NV. The ...
General Motors was represented by the New York specialist law firm Weil, Gotshal & Manges. The United States Treasury was represented by the United States Attorneys Office for the Southern District of New York and Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft LLP. An ad hoc group of the bondholders of General Motors Corporation was also represented in court. [47]
General Motors plans to begin winding down operations of its Saab unit, after it was unable to reach a deal to sell the brand to Dutch concern Spyker Cars, the company said in a brief statement ...