The Fall of MG Rover
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Case Details:
Case Code : BSTR166 Case Length : 16 Pages Period : 1975-2005 Organization : MG Rover Pub Date : 2005 Teaching Note :Not Available Countries : UK Industry : Auto and Ancillaries
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This case study was compiled from published sources, and is intended to be used as a basis for class discussion. It is not intended to illustrate either effective or ineffective handling of a management situation. Nor is it a primary information source.
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"Rover's demise must give us all pause for thought about
how we have failed to protect our once magnificent manufacturing industry and
why…"1
- Editorial, Daily Express, April 16, 2005.
"The death of a factory and the end of a great tradition…
the suspects...British Aerospace, BMW, the Government, Phoenix Four…"2
- Sean O'Grady, The Independent, April 26, 2005.
MG Rover Seeks Bankruptcy
In its lifespan of over a century, MG Rover Group Limited (MG Rover), one of the
oldest and largest automobile manufacturers in the UK, went through countless
mergers, takeovers and partnerships. The last merger negotiations the company
went through before it folded up, took place in June 2004. This time MG Rover
was negotiating with China's Shanghai Automotive Industrial Corporation (SAIC)3
to sell 70 per cent of its equity stake to SAIC. These negotiations were
critical for MG Rover's survival, given the fact that it had been a chronic loss
maker since the mid-1970s. If the deal materialized, MG Rover was to develop a
new car model in collaboration with SAIC in an effort to pull up its falling
sales.
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However, SAIC required MG Rover to be solvent at the time of signing the deal
and for two years thereafter. On an examination of MG Rover's books, SAIC
realized that the UK-based company was not capable of meeting these solvency
requirements. Consequently, SAIC called off the negotiations.
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On April 08, 2005, after the negotiations with SAIC
collapsed; MG Rover succumbed to huge debts and sought bankruptcy (Refer
Exhibit I for a summary on bankruptcy laws in the UK).
Phoenix Venture Holdings (Phoenix)4,
the owner of MG Rover, issued a statement that the directors had taken
necessary steps to appoint administrators from PriceWaterhouseCoopers5
(PwC) for managing MG Rover and its subsidiary Powertrain after
the bankruptcy (Refer Exhibit II for the press release regarding the
appointment of administrators). With this development, Britain lost its
last major domestic automobile manufacturer. |
The Fall of MG Rover
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