Monday April 9, 8:29 PM
Malaysia PM, Volkswagen yet to meet on Proton
KUALA LUMPUR, April 9 (Reuters) - Malaysian Prime Minister
Abdullah Ahmad Badawi has not yet met the chairman of Volkswagen
AG for talks on a possible tie-up with
state-controlled carmaker Proton Holdings , the premier
said on Monday.
Loss-making Proton, which faces a shrinking market share in
the increasingly competitive domestic market, is looking to tie
up with a global car-maker to boost its sales and turn around
the company.
Its main asset is a modern, low-cost production line north
of the capital.
"I have not seen him yet," Abdullah told reporters in reply
to a question on whether he had met the chairman of the German
carmaker. "He has not made his appearance here. I don't think I
can wait too long ... I can't be waiting forever, don't you
think so?".
Pressed for the date of a meeting, Abdullah said, "I will
not tell you when."
Industry sources said talks between Volkswagen and the
Malaysian government had been bogged down over several issues,
including Volkswagen's reluctance to assume Proton's debts.
Once before, in 2005, Volkswagen explored an alliance with
Proton but the talks failed.
Proton Chief Executive Syed Zainal Abidin Syed Mohamad Tahir
said at the weekend that a decision on Proton's foreign partner
should be made quickly but not hastily.
"The main issue is that the government's and the country's
objectives should be met," news agency Bernama quoted him as
saying.
Early this month Abdullah said Malaysia was still talking
with U.S. car maker General Motors Corp about a possible
tie-up with Proton, but he gave no details of the talks.
French car maker PSA Peugeot Citroen had also
explored a tie-up with Proton before calling off the talks last
month, saying it was not economically viable to co-produce cars
with the Malaysian company.
Proton shares closed down 1.5 percent at 6.55 ringgit.
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