Email this article | |
Print article | |
Feedback |
(KUALA LUMPUR) Malaysia's national carmaker Proton may sell a controlling stake in the troubled business to a foreign manufacturer, a report said yesterday.
Proton chairman Nadzmi Mohd Salleh told the New Straits Times that it had been approached by US and Japanese carmakers looking to expand overseas as their domestic markets shrank.
The company may sign collaborative agreements, or ask them to buy a controlling stake, he said.
'If they buy a stake in Proton, they can get the 29 per cent (shareholding) that Proton has. They know what they want. It is up to shareholders to decide if they want to sell Proton,' he reportedly said. 'If Proton is a problem child, we have to let it go. But if you want to enhance Proton's capability and also the viability over a period of difficult times, then the collaboration with the foreign carmakers has to take a different form.'
Mr Nadzmi said that Proton may also strike a partnership with an Indian car company.
'Proton is looking at something now (in India). We have to look at the bigger markets. If you look at India and China, you will never go wrong.'
Proton's market share has slumped in recent years as it flailed in a newly deregulated market.
|
The government has urged it to forge a partnership with a foreign carmaker to give it the expertise and economies of scale that it needs to survive. However, talks with Volkswagen and General Motors have collapsed, with the stumbling block reputed to be demands for a stake in Proton. -- AFP
No comments:
Post a Comment