Sept. 29 (Bloomberg) — Siemens AG, which sold its mobile- phone division to Benq Corp. last year, said it may take legal steps against Benq after the Taiwanese company decided to stop funding its German handset unit to stem losses.
“Under the given circumstances Siemens will examine its legal position against Benq,” Siemens Chief Executive Officer Klaus Kleinfeld said today in an e-mailed statement. Munich- based Siemens is Germany’s largest engineering company.
Siemens, which sold its first mobile phone two decades ago, decided last October to pay Benq 250 million euros ($316 million) to take on the unit after losses mounted and its market share shrank. Benq Mobile GmbH & Co., the German handset unit of Taipei-based Benq, filed for insolvency protection today, the division’s spokesman Stefan Mueller said by telephone.
“For Siemens, the continuation of the German locations was an important factor behind the decision by Benq to be a buyer” of the Siemens operations, Kleinfeld said. The executive, who didn’t elaborate on what legal steps Siemens may take, doesn’t understand why the Benq division needs to file for bankruptcy protection, it said.
Benq’s German cellular phone unit, with offices in the cities of Munich and Bocholt and a factory in Kamp-Lintfort, employs about 3,000 workers. Benq is Taiwan’s biggest mobile phone maker.
`Responsibilities’
Juergen Ruettgers, the prime minister in the western German state of North Rhine-Westphalia, today led Benq Mobile workers in a protest against Benq and Siemens at the factory in the town of Kamp-Lintfort.
“Siemens still has responsibilities for Kamp-Lintfort,” Ruettgers said in a broadcast on the N24 television channel.
Benq, based in Taipei, estimates its handset division has lost 600 million euros since the takeover of the Siemens unit. Siemens also bought a 2.5 percent stake in Benq for 50 million euros.
“The insolvency administrator is on its way to our company and will be introduced to employees this afternoon,” Benq Mobile spokesman Mueller said.
Shares of Benq rose by their daily limit of 7 percent to NT$19.45 in Taipei. The stock has dropped almost 40 percent this year on concern the company may face greater losses from the unit.
Shares of Siemens rose 23 cents, or 0.3 percent, to 68.85 euros as of 2:37 p.m. in Frankfurt.
Source- http://www.bloomberg.com