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Published: December 28, 2005 01:41 pm    print this story   email this story   comment on this story  

DCX sells diesel-engine maker

By GEIR MOULSON
Associated Press

BERLIN -- Automaker DaimlerChrysler AG said Wednesday it is selling diesel-engine maker MTU Friedrichshafen GmbH and the rest of its off-highway business unit to financial investor EQT as part of a drive to focus on its core vehicles business.

DaimlerChrysler said the two sides valued the unit at $1.9 billion in U.S. dollars, and added that it expected a cash inflow of some $1.18 billion from the sale. It forecast a $355 million boost to net profit.

In addition to MTU Friedrichshafen, the sale includes the off-highway activities of the Redford, Mich.-based Detroit Diesel Corp.

A sale of the unit had been widely expected. DaimlerChrysler bought out the minority shareholders of MTU Friedrichshafen in September and later said it was in talks with several potential buyers.

DaimlerChrysler shares were up 0.4 percent at $50.88 in early trading on the Frankfurt exchange.

The German-U.S. automaker is selling off activities beyond its core automotive business and its holding in European aerospace group EADS.

"With the sale to EQT, we are putting MTU Friedrichshafen on the right track for continued expansion," DaimlerChrysler board member Ruediger Grube, who is also the chairman of the diesel engine maker's supervisory board, said in a statement. "As the prices under discussion with the three bidders were very similar, we decided in favor of the bidder with the most convincing concept."

MTU Friedrichshafen, based in the southwestern German town of Friedrichshafen, builds engines for trains, ships and construction machinery. It had nearly 6,700 employees at the end of last year -- some 5,850 of them in Germany.

DaimlerChrysler said the deal must be submitted for approval by the German Economy Ministry and antitrust authorities. It should close in the first quarter of 2006, it said.

EQT says it manages approximately $7.1 billion in eight funds and has invested in about 40 companies.

It concentrates on acquiring and developing mid-sized firms in northern Europe. EQT Partners, the investment adviser to the funds, has offices in Stockholm, Munich, Copenhagen, Helsinki and Frankfurt.

"We are committed to back MTU in their growth strategy," said Marcus Brennecke, managing partner of EQT Germany's operation. "We are very much looking forward to working together with management and employees to develop the company's potential."

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