Reuters
November 04, 2009
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Shares of Magna International Inc. were up more than 7 percent Wednesday, a day after General Motors reversed its decision to sell a majority stake in its European unit to a Magna-led consortium.
Shares of the Canadian auto parts company were up $3.17, or 7.37 percent, at $46.17 around noon on the Toronto Stock Exchange.
GM's board said on Tuesday that it decided to keep Opel for strategic reasons and as improving business conditions made the German-based operation more viable.
Magna and Russian partner Sberbank were going to inject 500 million euros ($742 million US) into Opel in exchange for a 55-percent stake in the struggling automaker.
After months of negotiation, two sides had reached a tentative agreement on the sale, supported by the German government.
GM was relaunched out of bankruptcy in July thanks to more than $50 billion US in American government funding and nearly $10 Billion Cdn from the governments of Canada and the province of Ontario.
The loss of Opel may be a good thing for Magna, as the there was a lot of negative sentiment among investors around the deal and this may remove some of that, said a representative of one of the company's major shareholders, who asked not to be named.
"I think the Street was concerned that Magna would have to sink money into it and the Street was concerned that it would distract Magna from focusing on gaining market share on the supplier side and consolidating the supplier base," said the investor, who was actually in favour of the deal going through.
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