China's Geely raid on Daimler reignites German know-how fears

Reuters  |  BERLIN/FRANKFURT 

By Michael Nienaber, Edward Taylor and Schuetze

BERLIN/FRANKFURT (Reuters) - Automaker Geely's purchase of a $9 billion stake in maker rekindled fears in on Monday of its highly-prized expertise falling into Chinese hands.

stuck to Berlin's position that Geely's swoop was a business matter, but said Germany's openness must not be not exploited by other countries.

Geely, which owns rival Swedish carmaker Volvo, is pushing for access to know-how in electric and autonomous cars.

On Wednesday, a German parliamentary committee will question government officials on whether Geely has violated disclosure rules and whether loopholes in need to be closed, the and newspaper reported on Tuesday.

tightened its rules on foreign takeovers last year, the first country to do so, after a series of deals saw gain access to high-tech know-how, while attempts by German companies to buy full control of Chinese rivals remains prohibited.

Although under German law, the government can only intervene if a threshold of 25 percent is exceeded, investors must abide by market rules, Zypries said in interviews with Daimler's and Handelsblatt newspaper.

Geely revealed its 9.7 percent stake in on Friday, surprising the market as it had not disclosed having crossed regulatory thresholds of 3 and 5 percent.

Financial and markets regulator Bafin, which oversees the proper disclosure of stakes said it was investigating whether there had been any breach of disclosure rules, which can result in fines of 10 million euros or more.

The Chinese carmaker first approached in November and asked it to issue shares so it could buy a stake, as well as for access to to help set up an joint venture in Wuhan,

Daimler, which employs 289,000 people, declined to do a deal as it had reservations about a new industrial alliance for fear of alienating its existing Chinese joint venture partner BAIC, a person familiar with the carmaker's thinking said.

and BAIC on Sunday said they were planning to co-invest more than 11.9 billion yuan ($1.88 billion) to build a new local production base.

"has already rejected Geely's overtures once, and execs we spoke with argue it's simply not clear what Geely could offer Mercedes," said in a note.

STEALTH

Geely responded to the rejection in November by enlisting Dirk Notheis, the former of in and Yi Bao, a former of Huaxin Securities, sources familiar with the matter told

Notheis, who declined comment, and Yi Bao, who could not be reached, devised a way for Geely to build a significant stake in using aggressive takeover tactics which German regulators had sought to quash.

Geely worked with Lynch, which declined to comment on Monday, to help secure a 9.69 percent voting stake using derivatives to help skirt disclosure requirements, two people familiar with the deal told

executives in were at first caught off by the approach, but welcomed Geely in meetings on Monday to see how to "constructively discuss" industry changes.

Zhejian Geely Holding also owns several other carmakers including Sweden's Volvo Cars, London's and its own It has agreed to buy a $3.3 billion stake in

KNOCK-ON IMPACT

The first sign of wider ramifications from Geely's move on surfaced on Monday as dropped the of Geely's from its board, citing competition concerns with rival

And EU trade ministers will meet this week to discuss a range of issues including how better to protect strategically important European companies from unwanted investors.

Germany's DIHK chambers of industry and commerce representing 3.6 million companies in Europe's largest economy welcomed Geely's actions.

"In principle, it is an honour that foreign investors take interest in German companies," Volker Treier, the DIHK's was quoted by and as saying.

Several major deals during 2017 raised German sensitivities about multi-billion euro foreign takeovers, notably Chinese buying German robotics firm Kuka, and Hong Kong billionaire Li Ka-shing's buying German metering firm

"The events of last Friday are the latest demonstrations of China's growing confidence and assertiveness, growing desire to impose its will on global affairs, and growing willingness to exploit the German OEMs' heavy reliance on Chinese profits," said.

($1 = 0.8117 euros)

(Reporting by and Andreas Cremer in Berlin, Georgina Prodhan, Schuetze and Edward Taylor in Frankfurt and Johannes Hellstrom in Stockholm; Editing by and Alexander Smith)

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, February 27 2018. 09:44 IST
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