
Alvis Vickers in context of the evolution of the land systems division of BAE Systems, 1970s to
Land & Armaments formation
'Alvis Ltd' was created when 'United Scientific Holdings plc' acquired the Alvis division of the
nationalised vehicle manufacturer
BL plc in 1981. United Scientific maintained its own name until 1992 when the group was renamed 'Alvis plc'. Alvis plc acquired
Vickers Defence Systems from
Rolls-Royce in October 2002 to form 'Alvis Vickers'. Alvis Vickers was acquired by
BAE Systems in 2004 and became '
BAE Systems Land Systems (Weapons & Vehicles) Ltd', now part of the
BAE Systems Land and Armaments operating group.
History
Alvis became part of
Rover in 1965, which ended the company's car manufacturing in 1967 to allow it to concentrate on the manufacture of armoured vehicles. In 1968 Rover and its Alvis subsidiary were incorporated into the
Leyland Motor Corporation later British Leyland or BL. In 1981 the then nationalised BL sold the Alvis business to United Scientific Holdings plc for £27 million. United Scientific was a manufacturer of military sighting products.
In 1992 United Scientific adopted the name Alvis plc.
In October 1997 Alvis plc acquired Hägglunds to form
Alvis Hagglunds AB. In September 1998 Alvis acquired the armoured vehicle business of
GKN plc in a deal which saw GKN take a 29.9% stake in Alvis. GKN's shareholding was purchased by
BAE Systems in September 2003 for £73 million.
[BAE Systems plc (Sept. 02, 2003) "BAE Systems completes purchase of GKN's 29% stake in Alvis". Press release]
In early 2000 Alvis sold a share of its
Avimo Group optronics subsidiary to
Thomson-CSF and sold all of its remaining shareholding to
Thales Group (the renamed Thomson-CSF) in 2001.
In 2002 Alvis acquired
Vickers Defence Systems from
Rolls-Royce for £16 million to form 'Alvis Vickers'
[1] The acquisition of Vickers brought the
Challenger tank into Alvis' portfolio, as well as Vickers' successful military bridging division and its South African subsidiary
Vickers OMC.
BAE takeover
In 2004, the board of Alvis approved a £309m takeover bid by the American defence company
General Dynamics. Within 3 months
BAE Systems, which already had a 29% stake in the company, outbid General Dynamics by offering £355m. The action was seen as a defence of the home market from a foreign rival. David Mulholland of
Jane's Defence Weekly said "I don't believe BAE expects to make money from this deal," characterising the purchase as strategic rather than commercial. The bid was accepted by the majority of shareholders.
[2]
In
September 2004, BAE announced the creation of BAE Systems Land Systems, a new company bringing together the BAE subsidiaries, BAE Systems RO Defence and Alvis Vickers. Alvis Vickers became' BAE Systems Land Systems (Weapons & Vehicles) Limited', a subsidiary of BAE Systems Land Systems. In
2005, the acquisition of
United Defense led to the creation of
BAE Systems Land and Armaments.
References
1. "Vickers taken over by Alvis" (Oct. 1, 2002) BBC News
2. "BAE triumphs in tank firm battle" (June 4, 2004) BBC News
See also
★
Alvis Cars
External links
★
Earley Engineering - Alvis Sales and Restoration