Volkswagen signs off on US$3.7 billion Traton-Navistar deal

Published Sun, Nov 8, 2020 · 09:50 PM

DeeperDive is a beta AI feature. Refer to full articles for the facts.

Frankfurt am Main

VOLKSWAGEN AG's board signed off on a US$3.7 billion deal for its heavy-truck unit Traton SE to acquire Navistar International Corp, deepening the German company's bet on the lucrative North American market.

VW will provide Traton with a 12- to 18-month loan of 3.3 billion euros (S$5.3 billion) to fund the transaction, according to a statement last Saturday. Details of the deal - in which Traton will pay US$44.50 a share for the 83 per cent of Navistar stock it doesn't own - were unchanged from an announcement last month. It's expected to close mid-2021.

Navistar, the maker of International branded trucks, is a major player in North America. Traton has coveted the company as a means to challenge sector leaders Daimler AG and Volvo AB on a global scale. The VW unit makes Scania and MAN vehicles and is largely dependent on sales in Europe and Latin America.

VW is Navistar's second-largest shareholder with a 16.7 per cent stake, narrowly behind billionaire investor Carl Icahn's 16.8 per cent holding. MHR Fund Management, the hedge fund founded by Mark Rachesky, owns almost 16.4 per cent of the Lisle, Illinois-based company.

While analysts have largely praised the logic of Traton's purchase, the company has experienced how difficult it can be to integrate industrial operations after taking full control. Cooperation between Scania and MAN has been complicated for years by internal rivalries, and Traton embarked on a deep restructuring at MAN after cost-sharing projects with Scania failed to stop a dramatic erosion in earnings.

DECODING ASIA

Navigate Asia in
a new global order

Get the insights delivered to your inbox.

Apart from establishing a US footprint through the Navistar takeover, Traton has been building its presence in Asia. It announced a plan last month to expand an existing purchasing cooperation with Toyota Motor Corp's truck subsidiary Hino by adding joint work on battery-electric and fuel-cell trucks. BLOOMBERG

Decoding Asia newsletter: your guide to navigating Asia in a new global order. Sign up here to get Decoding Asia newsletter. Delivered to your inbox. Free.

Share with us your feedback on BT's products and services