-
April 2026 M T W T F S S « Jan 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 -
NMeda: Motor sports is really for every one. Glad to know »
-
online spiele: Hi there, You have done a fantastic job. I will d »
-
Lily: I do not comment, but after looking at through a f »
-
jd: Reading this I was reminded of the book " »
-
John E.: Thanks. Perhaps you should consider "Guest Posting »
-
DARPA awards Phase 2 SBIR contract for HEV motorcycle prototype
January 20, 2015 By Neville -
Report: Hyundai to cut price of FCV in Korea to compete with Toyota
January 20, 2015 By Neville -
Nissan LEAF is best-selling EV in Europe for fourth year in a row
January 20, 2015 By Neville -
Ford of Europe designer Stefan Lamm joins VW’s Seat brand
January 20, 2015 By Sean -
Ford’s German production to raise as demand rebounds
January 20, 2015 By Sean
-
VW’s Scania bid succeeds, clears way for truck alliance

Volkswagen Group secured enough backing to move forward with a €6.7 billion ($9.2 billion) bid for Scania, removing the last major obstacle to a nearly decade-long effort to forge an integrated heavy-trucks unit.
VW, which already controls two-thirds of Scania, now has shareholder support giving it 90.47 percent of the Swedish company, the automaker said on Tuesday. That pushes VW past the 90 percent threshold needed under Swedish law to force out remaining owners and delist Scania.
VW has been working to fully integrate Scania to deepen three-way cooperation between the Swedish company, German-based MAN, which VW also controls, and its own commercial-vehicles marque. The Scania purchase caps an effort that began in 2006 to create a global trucks division that can compete with rivals Daimler and Volvo.
“The commercial-vehicle business is increasingly becoming the second strong pillar for the group,” CEO Martin Winterkorn said on Tuesday at the automaker’s annual meeting in Hanover, Germany. “We can now take the next logical and consistent step in our strategy to strengthen the operational integration.”
The German manufacturer has thus far reaped limited financial rewards for the billions of euros invested in buying control of Scania and MAN as minority investors resisted efforts to share technology that would boost overall profit. The combined businesses would overtake Daimler and Volvo as the biggest truck producer in Europe.
VW has achieved only €200 million in savings from joint work among its light commercial-van unit, Scania and MAN. VW’s goal is to deepen cooperation among the three businesses in areas such as drivetrains, chassis, cabins and electronics to reach annual operating-profit synergies of €650 million.
“The development of the trucks business has been a tragedy because it’s taken far too long,” said Stefan Bratzel, director of the Center of Automotive Management at the University of Applied Sciences in Bergisch Gladbach, Germany. “The progress has been at a snail’s pace,” and even with the deal, “one has to think long term — 10 to 15 years.”
VW, which extended the offer period on April 30 after attaining shareholder support totaling 88.25 percent, had declined to raise its offer of 200 kronor ($30.44) per share, which is 36 percent more than Scania’s closing price prior to the Feb. 21 proposal.
Alecta, a Swedish pension fund that holds 2.04 percent of the share capital, pushed VW over the 90 percent threshold on Tuesday after deciding to accept the offer, which Alecta had earlier rejected as too low.
“After renewed talks with Volkswagen, it is our conclusion that a higher bid price cannot be achieved,” Alecta said in a statement on its Web site. “Even though the bid still does not fully reflect Scania’s long-term value, we believe it is acceptable.”
VW already has a domination agreement with MAN, which means the two can legally work more closely. That left Scania as the last unit preventing VW from creating an integrated heavy-truck division.
“It’s a good strategic move for them,” said Mike Dean, a London-based analyst with Credit Suisse. “VW’s got a good track record of integrating companies, and now that they take away the arm’s length hurdle, they should be able to accelerate integration and synergies.”
VW is also working to move forward the cooperation by hiring former Daimler trucks chief Andreas Renschler, 56, to succeed Leif Oestling, who was previously the Scania CEO, in overseeing the commercial vehicles business. Renschler will assume the post in February.
At Daimler, he spent almost a decade running the truckmaking operations, the world’s biggest by revenue. His efforts included restructuring projects in the U.S., Japan and Brazil as well as expanding in emerging markets including China, Russia and India.
“Renschler is definitely the best man for this challenge with his global industry experience and a neutral approach toward the brands,” said Roman Mathyssek, a Munich-based analyst at consultancy Strategy Engineers GmbH.


