The Asian Age

Germany denies interferin­g in China bid for Kuka

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Berlin: Germany denied interferin­g in Chinese home appliance maker Midea's 4.5 billion euro ($ 5 billion) bid for industrial robot maker Kuka on Friday, saying it was not organising a rival offer. German media have reported that German economy minister Sigmar Gabriel wanted to forge an alliance of German or European firms to prevent a sale to the Chinese company, but the economy ministry denied this. Kuka has become the latest and biggest German industrial technology group to be targeted by a Chinese buyer as the world's second- largest economy makes the transition from a low- cost manufactur­er to a high- tech industrial hub. “The minister is not organising a consortium for an alternativ­e offer in the Kuka case,” ministry spokesman Andreas Audretsch told a regular news conference. German government sources have said Berlin would examine how critical Kuka's technology is for the digitizati­on of industry, an economic priority for Chancellor Angela Merkel's government. China said on Thursday the deal should not be politicize­d. The spokesman said that Gabriel would appreciate a German or European bid, but added: "To make this clear: Such processes are corporate decisions and the government is not interferin­g.” On Wednesday, Gabriel said there were efforts to formulate an alternativ­e offer, but it was unclear whether those efforts would materializ­e. Michael Fuchs, deputy leader of the coalition group in Germany's lower house of parliament, indicated shortly after the bid was announced in mid- May that the government would not intervene to stop it. Midea will not be able to control Kuka fully unless unlisted mechanical engineerin­g group Voith and another investor, Loh, sell their stakes, totaling just over 35 percent of Kuka's capital, or strike an agreement with the Chinese firm.

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