After painfully drawn-out negotiations, General Motors’ board has agreed to sell its Opel unit to Canadian firm Magna International, maintaining a tie that will keep Opel a "a fully integrated part of GM's global product development organization," the company said. The German government, which earlier this year loaned Opel $2.1 billion, was pushing for the deal.
The board also recommended that its Vauxhall brand, based in the UK, go to Magna. GM is set to sell 55% of Opel to the Canadian company, with workers holding 10% and the Detroit firm hanging onto the remainder. Opel is important to GM because it has been the main source of engineering for the small and mid-sized cars, the Wall Street Journal reports, and is GM's biggest seller in Europe.
(More General Motors stories.)