BenQ Mobile

Last updated

BenQ Mobile
Type Subsidiary
IndustryCommunications
Predecessor Siemens Mobile
Founded1 October 2005
Defunct30 January 2007
(BenQ-branded mobile handsets have been produced again since 2008 by BenQ Corporation in Taiwan and Asian markets)
Fate Bankruptcy
Headquarters Munich, Germany, Taipei, Taiwan
Key people
Clemens Joos, CEO; Jerry Wang, EVP and CMO; Alex Liou, Head of Corporate Finance; Irwin Chen, Member of the Board
ProductsMobile phones, PDA, Smartphone
Brands Siemens (until 2006)
BenQ Mobile (until 2006)
BenQ-Siemens (2006-2007)
BenQ (2008-present)
Total assets US$775 million
Number of employees
~3,000
Parent BenQ Corporation
Website www.benqmobile.com
BenQ-Siemens store BenQ-Siemens Phone Store.jpg
BenQ-Siemens store
BenQ-Siemens EF81 BenQ-Siemens EF81 1.jpg
BenQ-Siemens EF81

BenQ Mobile GmbH & Co. OHG was the mobile communications subsidiary of Taiwanese BenQ Corporation, selling products under the BenQ-Siemens brand. [1] The group, based in Munich, Germany, was formed out of BenQ's acquisition of the then struggling Siemens Mobile group in 2005. The newly formed company won the most iF product design awards in 2006 and also won many design awards in Germany's Red Dot competition. [2] BenQ Mobile failed later that year. [3]

Contents

History

Siemens Mobile was loss-making and struggling in the market, and the division was then sold to BenQ Corporation in June 2005 to try to turn the business around. As part of the deal, Siemens would pay BenQ at least 250 million euros to get the new venture to a solid start, in return of a 2.5% stake in BenQ. [4] The acquisition was completed on 1 October 2005, with the formation of BenQ Mobile, led by a German CEO, Clemens Joos, and a Taiwanese chairman, Jerry Wang. Joos had already been president of Siemens Mobile since 2004. [5]

Part of the reason why BenQ was chosen by Siemens was the Taiwanese company's interest to keep German locations open - the headquarters in Munich and the manufacturing plants in Kamp-Lintfort and in Bocholt. [4] Other research and development and manufacturing plants were located in Aalborg, Beijing, Suzhou, Ulm (also in Germany), Manaus, Mexicali, Taipei and Wrocław. [6] Before the acquisition BenQ was already making mobile phones – including two Symbian UIQ smartphone models and one Windows Mobile smartphone model. [7] [8]

Logo of BenQ-Siemens BenQ-Siemens logo.svg
Logo of BenQ-Siemens

On 17 January 2006, the first handsets under the new BenQ-Siemens brand were launched: the EF81,(this model was developed by SIEMENS AG before called SLV140 a slim clamshell phone similar to Motorola RAZR; the S68, a premium light and compact candybar phone targeting business users, this phone is the successor of SP65 (the S65 for some business or government who needs the protection and higher standards privacy for their staffs because the model rid off camera function for protect taking photos of secrets papers or other in-house information of themselves ; and S88, a multimedia device with a 2-megapixel camera. [9] [10]

In February 2006, the EF51 model was launched featuring music buttons on the front with a flip-down design that reveals a keypad. [11] BenQ Mobile introduced the BenQ-Siemens P51 in March, a Windows Mobile 5.0 device and the only smartphone the company would release. [12]

Collapse

The company ended up making huge losses, with parent BenQ losing $1 billion (€840 million) from the acquisition to September 2006, [13] [14] [15] and its share price dropping by 45 percent. [16] BenQ Mobile only had a global 2.4% market share as of Q3 2006, demonstrating its failure to turn the business around in its first year. [17] In September, it was announced that its factories in Mexico and Taiwan would halt production. [18]

BenQ Mobile filed for bankruptcy in a Munich court on 29 September 2006, a day after its parent BenQ decided to stop funding the unit. [19] This sparked a debate in Germany over whether BenQ only acquired the Siemens mobile division for its patents and intellectual property, and that it did not intend to continue manufacturing mobile phones in Germany. [20] The bankruptcy caused outrage in Germany over the possible thousands of job losses, [21] with chancellor Angela Merkel having said that Siemens is responsible for the BenQ Mobile (i.e. former Siemens Mobile) employees who are at risk. [20] Siemens set up a 35 million euros fund for the employees. [22] Siemens stopped payment still owed to BenQ related to the original acquisition on 5 October [19] [23] and considered taking legal action against BenQ about the future use of the brand and patents, [24] although no claim would be made. Siemens was heavily criticised by some German politicians and labour unions for mismanagement that led to the bankruptcy under subsequent BenQ ownership. [21] [25] A BenQ executive said that stopping funds for the Mobile subsidiary and forcing it into insolvency protection was a "really tough decision" and not as easy as "just walking away" as was reported by some media outlets. [19]

2,000 employees were laid off in late October 2006. [26]

A scandal investigation was launched into Siemens's and BenQ's roles in the bankruptcy of BenQ Mobile amid allegations that financial offences were committed. [27] As of March 2007, 13 executives, including Eric Yu, were detained in Taiwan accused of selling their shares in BenQ before the announcement knowing about the bankruptcy filing. Shares in BenQ fell 7% to its lowest level in ten years. [28] BenQ CEO K.Y. Lee was also detained a month later. [29] At the same time Siemens was facing wide allegations in Germany of internal corruption and bribery not necessarily related to BenQ Mobile. [25] [30]

After no suitable investors or buyers were found for the business, BenQ Mobile's insolvency administrator, Martin Prager, said on 2 January 2007 that the company would have to shut down. [17] On 30 January the BenQ Mobile factory in Kamp-Lintfort closed. Representatives of the labour union IG Metall bid farewell to the last 165 workers with flowers. [31] The demise of BenQ Mobile caused 3,000 employees to lose their jobs. [32] The company's assets were auctioned off in Hamburg and at eBay in March 2007 [33] [34] [35] and in June.

The losses of 2005 and 2006, wiped out all profits BenQ had made since 1999. [36]

Aftermath

Martin Prager launched a 26-million-euro lawsuit against its former parent BenQ in August 2007 on top of 80 million euros already claimed. The lawsuit was partly for BenQ bonus payments promised to BenQ Mobile employees in Germany that were paid by the BenQ Mobile subsidiary. [37] [38] [34] In July 2008, Prager threatened a multi-million euro lawsuit against Siemens after claiming irregularities were found in the acquisition and that BenQ Mobile was already insolvent as early as May 2006 - a claim first reported by German newspaper Die Welt . [39] A settlement between Prager and Siemens was reached in November 2008. [40]

Former BenQ CEO K. Y. Lee, along with several executives including Eric Yu and Sheaffer Lee, were cleared of their insider trading, embezzlement and forgery charges in August 2009, after a two-year trial. [36]

After the company closed, its former parent company, BenQ, launched five new phones (produced in Asia) under the BenQ-Siemens brand during 2007 (the license still ran for another four years). These include the A53 (Taiwan only), E52, C31, C32 and SF71 – [41] [42] briefly continuing the lifespan of the BenQ-Siemens brand. In August 2007, BenQ announced that it would resume production of mobile devices using its own "BenQ" brand, coming with the announcements of the BenQ E72, M7 and T51 models that would initially launch in Taiwan. [43] BenQ started making Android devices from 2013. [44]

List of mobile phones

BenQ-Siemens S68 Benq.siemens.s68.jpg
BenQ-Siemens S68
BenQ-Siemens EF51 BenQ-Siemens EF51.jpg
BenQ-Siemens EF51
BenQ-Siemens E71 Benq-Siemens E71.JPG
BenQ-Siemens E71

Sponsorships

BenQ sponsored the Real Madrid CF football club following the signing of a four year deal. [45] The BenQ-Siemens name appeared on the shirts of Real Madrid in the 2006-2007 season, but the company's collapse meant that the sponsorship only lasted one season. [46]

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