a-merger-with

By Bloomberg News March 18 (Bloomberg) — Geely Automobile Holdings Ltd. , the listed unit of the Chinese auto company trying to buy Volvo Cars from Ford Motor Co. , may take control of the maker of the iconic London black cab to step up overseas expansion. Geely may increase its holding in Manganese Bronze Holdings Plc to 51 percent from 19.9 percent by buying new shares at 70 pence each, Mark Fryer , finance director of the Coventry, England-based company, said in an interview. Manganese, which produces taxis and parts in a Shanghai venture with Geely, will spearhead the Chinese automaker’s plans to sell its own saloon cars in the U.K. and Europe, he said. “This is going to revolutionize the company,” Fryer said yesterday. “Our future will be both as a manufacturer of black cabs in Coventry, although more of the parts will be coming from China, and an assembler and distributor for Geely vehicles.” In a statement yesterday, Manganese said that parts for its TX4 vehicles will be made in Shanghai, in a move that would eliminate about 60 positions at its Coventry plant. Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao is encouraging companies in the world’s third-largest economy to acquire technology and take on foreign rivals as part of a “go global” policy. Geely unveiled the Emgrand, its first homegrown model specifically designed for Western markets, in December and is seeking to use Manganese as its European distributor. ‘A Stretch?’ China is aiming for 10 percent, or an $85 billion share, of the world’s vehicle and auto-parts sales by 2015, the Ministry of Commerce said in November. “If you look back, you would have thought it was a stretch that British people would take to Japanese or South Korean cars,” Fryer said. “But Hyundai and Kia sold about 30,000 vehicles each in the U.K. last year and we sold 1,724. So it’s not going to take much to significantly increase the size and scale of our business.” Geely would become the second Chinese company to tie up with a U.K. vehicle manufacturer. SAIC Motor Corp. paid $116 million for the design rights to MG Rover Group Ltd.’s Rover 25 and 75 cars in 2005 and became the owner of MG’s plant in Birmingham after a merger with Nanjing Automobile Group Corp. in 2007. Manganese’s share sale, which needs shareholders’ approval, would raise about 14 million pounds ($21.5 million). The company yesterday reported a 6.9 million-pound 2009 loss. The shares fell 1.2 percent to 84.5 pence in London trading yesterday, valuing Manganese at 25.8 million pounds. Geely and Manganese need to agree on a range of commercial issues, including warranty policies and translation of handbooks, before the deal can go ahead, Fryer said. A Geely spokesman couldn’t immediately be reached for comment. Biggest Shareholder The Chinese automaker became Manganese’s biggest shareholder in 2007 after taking a 23 percent stake in the company as part of a 53 million pound venture in Shanghai to produce black cabs for the Asian market and parts for the British company’s plant in Coventry. That holding was diluted to 19.9 percent after a share placing in June. Production of taxis at the Chinese plant started in early 2009 and the first vehicles were sold in the third quarter. Making components in Shanghai for shipment to Coventry has led to cost savings of 1,200 pounds per vehicle so far with a further 800 pounds expected within six months. “Unfortunately, we have had to make redundancies in Coventry, but we are losing money and we can’t keep relying on shareholders to keep funding the business,” Fryer said. — Nerys Avery in London. Editors: Kenneth Wong , Chris Jasper To contact the reporter responsible for this story: Nerys Avery at Navery2@bloomberg.net

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London Black Cab Maker Manganese Plans to Deepen Link With China’s Geely

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By Bloomberg News March 18 (Bloomberg) — Geely Automobile Holdings Ltd. , the listed unit of the Chinese auto company trying to buy Volvo Cars from Ford Motor Co. , may take control of the maker of the iconic London black cab to step up overseas expansion. Geely may increase its holding in Manganese Bronze Holdings Plc to 51 percent from 19.9 percent by buying new shares at 70 pence each, Mark Fryer , finance director of the Coventry, England-based company, said in an interview. Manganese, which produces taxis and parts in a Shanghai venture with Geely, will spearhead the Chinese automaker’s plans to sell its own saloon cars in the U.K. and Europe, he said. “This is going to revolutionize the company,” Fryer said yesterday. “Our future will be both as a manufacturer of black cabs in Coventry, although more of the parts will be coming from China, and an assembler and distributor for Geely vehicles.” In a statement yesterday, Manganese said that parts for its TX4 vehicles will be made in Shanghai, in a move that would eliminate about 60 positions at its Coventry plant. Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao is encouraging companies in the world’s third-largest economy to acquire technology and take on foreign rivals as part of a “go global” policy. Geely unveiled the Emgrand, its first homegrown model specifically designed for Western markets, in December and is seeking to use Manganese as its European distributor. ‘A Stretch?’ China is aiming for 10 percent, or an $85 billion share, of the world’s vehicle and auto-parts sales by 2015, the Ministry of Commerce said in November. “If you look back, you would have thought it was a stretch that British people would take to Japanese or South Korean cars,” Fryer said. “But Hyundai and Kia sold about 30,000 vehicles each in the U.K. last year and we sold 1,724. So it’s not going to take much to significantly increase the size and scale of our business.” Geely would become the second Chinese company to tie up with a U.K. vehicle manufacturer. SAIC Motor Corp. paid $116 million for the design rights to MG Rover Group Ltd.’s Rover 25 and 75 cars in 2005 and became the owner of MG’s plant in Birmingham after a merger with Nanjing Automobile Group Corp. in 2007. Manganese’s share sale, which needs shareholders’ approval, would raise about 14 million pounds ($21.5 million). The company yesterday reported a 6.9 million-pound 2009 loss. The shares fell 1.2 percent to 84.5 pence in London trading yesterday, valuing Manganese at 25.8 million pounds. Geely and Manganese need to agree on a range of commercial issues, including warranty policies and translation of handbooks, before the deal can go ahead, Fryer said. A Geely spokesman couldn’t immediately be reached for comment. Biggest Shareholder The Chinese automaker became Manganese’s biggest shareholder in 2007 after taking a 23 percent stake in the company as part of a 53 million pound venture in Shanghai to produce black cabs for the Asian market and parts for the British company’s plant in Coventry. That holding was diluted to 19.9 percent after a share placing in June. Production of taxis at the Chinese plant started in early 2009 and the first vehicles were sold in the third quarter. Making components in Shanghai for shipment to Coventry has led to cost savings of 1,200 pounds per vehicle so far with a further 800 pounds expected within six months. “Unfortunately, we have had to make redundancies in Coventry, but we are losing money and we can’t keep relying on shareholders to keep funding the business,” Fryer said. — Nerys Avery in London. Editors: Kenneth Wong , Chris Jasper To contact the reporter responsible for this story: Nerys Avery at Navery2@bloomberg.net

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London Black Cab Maker Manganese Plans to Deepen Link With China’s Geely

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Globotek Files Revised SEC Form 8-K

February 8, 2010

NEW YORK, NY–(Marketwire – February 8, 2010) – JSC Globotek, a Russian energy reclamation company which recently completed a merger with Caribbean Villa Catering Corporation ( OTCBB : CBBV ), has filed a revised SEC form 8-K the company announced today.

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Dubai Shares Tumble Most Since August, Lead Arab Market Drop; Shuaa Falls

November 1, 2009

By Vivian Salama and Zainab Fattah Nov. 1 (Bloomberg) — Dubai shares slumped the most since mid-August, leading a drop in the region, as Shuaa Capital PSC reported a loss and Emaar Properties PJSC closed at its lowest in a month. Shuaa, the United Arab Emirates’ biggest investment bank, lost the most in more than four months after posting a third- quarter loss. Emaar, the country’s biggest developer, fell to the lowest since Oct. 4 after the chairman of Dubai Properties LLC, a company which Emaar plans to merge with, was arrested on suspicion of embezzlement. Dubai’s index dropped 5.5 percent, the most since Aug. 17, to 2,076.56 and Abu Dhabi’s measure declined 3.4 percent, the biggest loss since Jan. 21. Egypt’s EGX 30 Index retreated 2.5 percent at 1:10 p.m. in Cairo. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index lost 2.8 percent on Oct. 30 after a U.S. consumer-spending report sparked concern a global recovery may be protracted. Crude at the end of last week fell the most in a month. “Obviously we’re seeing some weakness imported from U.S. and emerging markets, but in our markets there’s a slight shift in investor psychology,” said Rabih Sultani , a fund manager at Duet Mena Ltd. “By the end of this year, people will go back to the old tedious job of looking closely at earnings, consumer spending, sales growth. We should see some continued volatility until then.” Arab markets are struggling to recoup last year’s losses as the global financial crisis prompted investors to pull out of the region following the delay and cancellation of real-estate projects. Dubai’s index is up 27 percent this year after falling 72 percent in 2008. Abu Dhabi’s index, which slid 47 percent last year, has gained 22 percent. Shuaa, Emaar Shuaa dropped 9.7 percent, the biggest decline since June 21, to 1.77 dirhams. The company reported a loss of 269.3 million dirhams ($73 million) after making impairment charges of 259 million dirhams. Emaar lost 7.7 percent to 4.05 dirhams. Hashim Al Dabal was arrested last month on suspicion of embezzlement, the emirate’s attorney general said. Emaar said last month talks on a merger with Dubai Properties, state-controlled Sama Dubai LLC and Tatweer LLC are progressing. “Now we’re seeing issues of fraud and negligence from management. It might prompt people to rethink the merger,” Duet Mena’s Sultani said. Qatar’s DSM 20 Index sank 3.5 percent, the most since July 12. Oman’s MSM30 Index slipped 1.3 percent, the Kuwait Stock Exchange Index lost 1.7 and Bahrain’s measure declined 0.6 percent. Saudi Arabia’s Tadawul All Share Index retreated 0.2 percent. To contact the reporter on this story: Vivian Salama in Dubai vsalama@bloomberg.net Zainab Fattah in Dubai on zfattah@bloomberg.net .

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Dubai Shares Tumble Most Since August, Lead Arab Market Drop; Shuaa Falls

November 1, 2009

By Vivian Salama and Zainab Fattah Nov. 1 (Bloomberg) — Dubai shares slumped the most since mid-August, leading a drop in the region, as Shuaa Capital PSC reported a loss and Emaar Properties PJSC closed at its lowest in a month. Shuaa, the United Arab Emirates’ biggest investment bank, lost the most in more than four months after posting a third- quarter loss. Emaar, the country’s biggest developer, fell to the lowest since Oct. 4 after the chairman of Dubai Properties LLC, a company which Emaar plans to merge with, was arrested on suspicion of embezzlement. Dubai’s index dropped 5.5 percent, the most since Aug. 17, to 2,076.56 and Abu Dhabi’s measure declined 3.4 percent, the biggest loss since Jan. 21. Egypt’s EGX 30 Index retreated 2.5 percent at 1:10 p.m. in Cairo. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index lost 2.8 percent on Oct. 30 after a U.S. consumer-spending report sparked concern a global recovery may be protracted. Crude at the end of last week fell the most in a month. “Obviously we’re seeing some weakness imported from U.S. and emerging markets, but in our markets there’s a slight shift in investor psychology,” said Rabih Sultani , a fund manager at Duet Mena Ltd. “By the end of this year, people will go back to the old tedious job of looking closely at earnings, consumer spending, sales growth. We should see some continued volatility until then.” Arab markets are struggling to recoup last year’s losses as the global financial crisis prompted investors to pull out of the region following the delay and cancellation of real-estate projects. Dubai’s index is up 27 percent this year after falling 72 percent in 2008. Abu Dhabi’s index, which slid 47 percent last year, has gained 22 percent. Shuaa, Emaar Shuaa dropped 9.7 percent, the biggest decline since June 21, to 1.77 dirhams. The company reported a loss of 269.3 million dirhams ($73 million) after making impairment charges of 259 million dirhams. Emaar lost 7.7 percent to 4.05 dirhams. Hashim Al Dabal was arrested last month on suspicion of embezzlement, the emirate’s attorney general said. Emaar said last month talks on a merger with Dubai Properties, state-controlled Sama Dubai LLC and Tatweer LLC are progressing. “Now we’re seeing issues of fraud and negligence from management. It might prompt people to rethink the merger,” Duet Mena’s Sultani said. Qatar’s DSM 20 Index sank 3.5 percent, the most since July 12. Oman’s MSM30 Index slipped 1.3 percent, the Kuwait Stock Exchange Index lost 1.7 and Bahrain’s measure declined 0.6 percent. Saudi Arabia’s Tadawul All Share Index retreated 0.2 percent. To contact the reporter on this story: Vivian Salama in Dubai vsalama@bloomberg.net Zainab Fattah in Dubai on zfattah@bloomberg.net .

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