Currently reading: Geely considering stock market flotation of Volvo
Chinese-owned Swedish brand is interested in floating in both Hong Kong and Stockholm; valued at between £12-22 billion

Chinese car giant Geely is considering floating Volvo on the Hong Kong and Stockholm stock exchanges. 

According to Bloomberg, the burgeoning Swedish brand's parent company has consulted three major banking firms - Goldman Sachs, Citigroup and Morgan Stanley - on the possible move. 

Sources disclosed that a company value of between £12 billion and £22 billion is being discussed, and that Geely aims to float the company on both the Hong Kong and Stockholm exchanges to reflect its Chinese ownership and Swedish management. Geely itself is already listed on the Hong Kong exchange. 

The flotation would be the latest in a slew of large financial moves by Geely, led by company chairman Li Shufu. This time last year, news broke that Geely had acquired Malaysian brand Proton and with it a controlling stake in Lotus

Volvo boss Håkan Samuelsson said that the move would be the decision of Li, rather than a decision coming from the brand’s headquarters in Gothenburg, Sweden. A Volvo spokesman said "An IPO is an option but it is a question for the owner.”

Earlier this year, Geely became the largest single shareholder in Mercedes-Benz parent company Daimler, acquiring close to 10% of the German giant. This investment was to aid Geely's catalogue of brands - most notably Volvo - in the race to electrification, given Mercedes' already-advanced EV development.

The flotation would also be the latest in a string of growing companies considering stock exchange entries; Aston Martin and McLaren have both explored the possibility, while Tesla’s stock market operations are well-documented and often volatile. 

Under Geely, Volvo has experienced an upswing in popularity, with safety and design-led offerings garnering industry accolade as well as sales successes - most notably the XC40 small SUV, which became the brand's and the UK's fastest-selling newly launched car.

Read more: 

Volvo to focus on electrifying current line-up before launching next new car

Lotus could switch to Volvo powertrains

Volvo electric cars to make up 50% of brand’s sales by 2025

Volvo XC60 wins World Car of the Year award

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WallMeerkat 14 May 2018

I'd totally forgot that they

I'd totally forgot that they owned Proton.

So much potential there, people might remember them as cheap but robust ex-Mitsubishis. At least until they started designing their own cars...

Perhaps they could do a "Skoda" and use Volvo tech but as a budget brand?

kboothby 14 May 2018

On that subject....

I have never understood why TATA has never considered using its "robust & basic" 4x4s as a springboard into developing countries with the Defender badge... something to do with the "premium" branding not being sullied mayhaps?