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Volvo Cars gets junk rating as bond offer hits the road
by Staff Writers
Stockholm (AFP) May 6, 2016


Sweden's Volvo Cars said Friday it received a junk credit rating from the Standard and Poor's agency as it seeks to sell $500 million euros ($571 million) of bonds to investors.

S&P gave the company a "BB" rating, the highest note in the "speculative" category, but added a positive outlook.

Tapping the corporate bond market for the first time in its 89-year history, Volvo will begin presentations for investors on Monday, a process known as "roadshow".

Truck manufacturer Volvo Group in 1999 sold Volvo Cars to Ford, which then sold on the Swedish carmaker to China's Geely in 2010.

Volvo Cars this week reported a net profit of 2.07 billion kroner (223 million euros/&255 million) for the first quarter on sales of 41.8 billion kroner.

The company, which makes no secret of its ambition to compete head-on with leading global high-end brands Audi, BMW, Mercedes-Benz and Jaguar, is aiming in 2016 to break last year's record 503,000 cars sold.

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VOLVO AB

FORD MOTOR

GEELY AUTOMOBILE HOLDINGS


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The government of New Zealand said Thursday it was taking additional steps to adopt a low-carbon economy by creating incentives to use more electric vehicles. "It's clear that electric vehicles are the future," Energy and Transport Minister Simon Bridges said in a statement. "A move from petrol and diesel to low-emission transport is a natural evolution, and it is our aim to encourage t ... read more


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