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More on Rover Sold

To: mgs@autox.team.net
Subject: More on Rover Sold
From: MGMagnette@aol.com
Date: Tue, 9 May 2000 12:53:34 EDT
 Phoenix deal saves Rover from closure
 
 
 









 

 
 BMW sells Rover Cars to Phoenix [9 May '00] - BMW
 
 
 MSF welcomes the success of the Phoenix bid for Rover [9 May '00] - 
Manufacturing, Science and Finance Union
 
 
 Keep Rover running campaign - Transport and General Workers Union
 
 
 Rover Task Force
 
 
 Rover
 
 
 Amalgamated Engineering and Electrical Union
 
 
 Press releases - Department of Trade and Industry [DTI]
 
 
 MG Cars
 
 
 DTI
 
 
 

  THE Phoenix consortium today announced that it had finalised a deal with 
BMW which would save the threatened Rover factory at Longbridge in Birmingham.
John Towers, head of the consortium and a former BMW executive, announced 
that it had acquired Rover for a symbolic purchase price of £10 following 
several days of intense negotiations. Contracts had been signed and completed 
at 8.30 this morning. Phoenix said it will take over responsibility for the 
development, production and distribution of all Rover cars. It will also 
acquire the MG brand and it will continue building the Rover 25, 45 and MG 
sports car at Longbridge.

In addition, production of the Rover 75 will be switched from Cowley in 
Oxford to the Birmingham plant. Phoenix said it also has plans to start 
producing an estate version of the Rover 75. BMW chairman Joachim Milberg 
said: "After intensive negotiations we have managed to find a buyer for Rover 
whose aim is to continue running Rover and to therefore prevent the loss of 
thousands of jobs in the Rover plant in Birmingham, in the supply industry 
and in the retail business."

Mr Towers said: "We are delighted that together with BMW we have secured a 
brighter future for Rover and its stakeholders. This is the first step in a 
series of changes which will fully justify the confidence and support which 
has kept this process going." The deal secures the jobs of several thousand 
workers at Longbridge and thousands of others in firms across the West 
Midlands which supply the huge factory with parts and other services.

There will still be redundancies at Longbridge but on a far smaller scale 
than if Rover had been bought by venture capitalist group Alchemy Partners, 
which surprisingly pulled out of negotiations last month. Phoenix has secured 
around £200 million backing from America's First Union Bank and is believed 
to be receiving £500 million from BMW.

Negotiations between Phoenix and BMW began last Tuesday and continued 
throughout the weekend as hopes were raised that a deal could be achieved. 
Analysts remained sceptical that Mr Towers could raise enough finance but 
today's announcement is a dramatic achievement for the quietly-spoken former 
Rover chief executive.

He will now be regarded as a hero throughout the West Midlands for saving 
Rover from closure. BMW had warned it would have no alternative other than to 
close Rover if a sale was not agreed by the end of this month. Department of 
Trade and Industry Secretary Stephen Byers welcomed the development, he said: 
"I spoke to John Towers about an hour ago. He had just signed the deal with 
BMW. He was relieved and in a really good mood and understandably so.

"Three weeks ago when I got the Towers Consortium together with BMW and 
facilitated their first meeting, I was criticised in many quarters for 
getting involved in that way. I think we were right then and I think today we 
are seeing the results of that." Mr Byers acknowledged that not all the jobs 
at Longbridge would be saved. He said: "The John Towers proposals will 
involve a number of jobs being lost, but it is a prospect which is far better 
than we were seeing two or three weeks ago."

Mr Byers said the Towers bid was not being underwritten by Government money. 
He said: "John Towers has been very clear, he wanted this proposal to be 
commercially viable without public subsidy. That is the case. We will give 
normal support that we would give to any business in terms of retraining, 
helping with skills, supporting wider regeneration. But there is no 
Government money going in to act as some form of risk capital to support this 
venture."

Union leaders warmly welcomed the announcement . Roger Lyons, general 
secretary of the Manufacturing, Science and Finance Union said: "This is 
wonderful news. Our campaign and support for the Phoenix bid has saved jobs 
throughout the West Midlands and the rest of the country." Sir Ken Jackson, 
general secretary of the Amalgamated Engineering and Electrical Union, said: 
"This is tremendous news. It saves thousands of jobs and gives Longbridge a 
secure future. I am absolutely delighted for the whole workforce."

Tony Woodley, of the Transport and General Workers' Union, said the members 
were absolutely delighted that the Phoenix consortium had succeeded. He said: 
"We've worked extremely hard, thousands of hours of work, with the Towers 
team to be able to limit the damage after the industrial disaster that BMW 
left us with. Our aim was to save as many jobs in the short term as is 
humanly possible and, just as importantly, to maintain the fabric of the 
plant to allow it to stay in car building."


 
 

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