Lazard's "Secret" Report on Opel Bidders: All Three Suitors Suck

Bertel Schmitt
by Bertel Schmitt

The longer the decision over the fate of Opel drags on, the messier it gets. Last week, three parties handed in their bids: Magna, RHJ, BAIC. Later in the week, BAIC was kicked out of the race. Remaining: RHJ, darling of GM, and Magna, darling of everybody else. Then, more facts surfaced. They didn’t endear the bidders to the decision-makers. Not at all.

Over the weekend, Leonhard Fischer, CEO of RHJ told the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung that he is not ruling out selling Opel back to GM—because he can’t. “Let us be pragmatic. It won’t work without General Motors,” Fischer said. Uh oh. Selling GM back to GM doesn’t sit well in Berlin, where the final decision on Opel’s fate will be made. Meanwhile . . .

The Süddeutsche Zeitung, always well informed when it comes to Opel matters, secured a “strictly confidential” report by the Lazard investment bank for the German government, analyzing the federal government’s options. Lazard concludes that none of the three bidders can rescue Opel. Opel is too small to “achieve critical mass necessary for a volume OEM.” In a word: Fuhgeddaboutit.

In fact, Lazard offers the same analysis as dear old TTAC: China’s BAIC offers the most capital and wants the least amount of loan guarantees. Canada/Russia’s Magna wants the most in guarantees and puts the least amount of cash on the table. Private equity firm RHJ is stuck in the middle with flu.

Politically, Magna is the most palatable option. For Lazard’s taste, RHJ is too dependent on GM and their projections are too optimistic. And BAIC would create a lot of jobs—in China.

With the apparently not so confidential but highly toxic paper in circulation, all options are suddenly wide open again. The metal workers union ruminates that RHJ and Magna could possibly join forces. Some politicians in Berlin are using the b-word: Bankruptcy. Allegations are making the rounds that the Lazard investment bank is simply covering the withdrawal of the German government from the Opel mess.

Titillating detail: Lazard, the bank that wrote a near-death-sentence for all three bidders, bred both Tim Collins, owner of RHJ’s parent Ripplewood, and Steven Rattner, the recently departed head of the Presidential Task Force On Autos. What goes around . . .

Bertel Schmitt
Bertel Schmitt

Bertel Schmitt comes back to journalism after taking a 35 year break in advertising and marketing. He ran and owned advertising agencies in Duesseldorf, Germany, and New York City. Volkswagen A.G. was Bertel's most important corporate account. Schmitt's advertising and marketing career touched many corners of the industry with a special focus on automotive products and services. Since 2004, he lives in Japan and China with his wife <a href="http://www.tomokoandbertel.com"> Tomoko </a>. Bertel Schmitt is a founding board member of the <a href="http://www.offshoresuperseries.com"> Offshore Super Series </a>, an American offshore powerboat racing organization. He is co-owner of the racing team Typhoon.

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  • Paris-dakar Paris-dakar on Jul 28, 2009

    I still think the Chinese will end up with it. That at least gets the Germans a transitional period of time where Germans stay employed while the Chinese transfer the technology and know-how to the PRC. And I could see the Engineering Operations continuing indefinitely in Germany to help the Chinese establish some credibility.

  • Charly Charly on Jul 28, 2009

    Do you really think the Chinese don't have engineering talent? They will be gone too. That transfer of R&D is what Germany (and GM) doesn't want and why Russia is a much better partner.

  • Mebgardner I owned 4 different Z cars beginning with a 1970 model. I could already row'em before buying the first one. They were light, fast, well powered, RWD, good suspenders, and I loved working on them myself when needed. Affordable and great styling, too. On the flip side, parts were expensive and mostly only available in a dealers parts dept. I could live with those same attributes today, but those days are gone long gone. Safety Regulations and Import Regulations, while good things, will not allow for these car attributes at the price point I bought them at.I think I will go shop a GT-R.
  • Lou_BC Honda plans on investing 15 billion CAD. It appears that the Ontario government and Federal government will provide tax breaks and infrastructure upgrades to the tune of 5 billion CAD. This will cover all manufacturing including a battery plant. Honda feels they'll save 20% on production costs having it all localized and in house.As @ Analoggrotto pointed out, another brilliant TTAC press release.
  • 28-Cars-Later "Its cautious approach, which, along with Toyota’s, was criticized for being too slow, is now proving prescient"A little off topic, but where are these critics today and why aren't they being shamed? Why are their lunkheaded comments being memory holed? 'Who&nbsp;controls the past&nbsp;controls the future. Who controls the present&nbsp;controls the past.' -Orwell, 1984
  • Tane94 A CVT is not the kiss of death but Nissan erred in putting CVTs in vehicles that should have had conventional automatics. Glad to see the Murano is FINALLY being redesigned. Nostalgia is great but please drop the Z car -- its ultra-low sales volume does not merit continued production. Redirect the $$$ into small and midsize CUVs/SUVs.
  • Analoggrotto Another brilliant press release.
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