Andreas Haller, founder of the insolvent electric commercial vehicle startup Quantron, has reacquired the company’s remaining assets and team through his holding firm, reviving the brand under a new legal entity. The acquisition was finalized on April 1 following approval by the creditors’ committee, according to the insolvency administrator.
Haller’s company, Andreas Haller Holding GmbH, took over the core workforce—now reduced to 35 employees—as part of a transferring reorganisation. “Quantron AG is now history,” the insolvency administrator, Constantin Graf Salm-Hoogstraeten, said, confirming that the new business will continue under the Haller Group umbrella. The Quantron brand will remain active, although the former legal entity is being dissolved.
Founded in late 2019, Quantron originally focused on converting diesel trucks to electric powertrains before repositioning itself as a platform provider for electric commercial vehicles. Its broader ambition was to operate an integrated ecosystem rather than serve as a traditional OEM. However, after a key financing round collapsed in late 2024, the company filed for insolvency, initiating proceedings that continued into early 2025.
While a more complex insolvency plan to maintain Quantron AG was initially considered, Salm-Hoogstraeten said it was ultimately not viable in the short term. An asset deal was seen as the quickest way to secure continuity and finalize new international orders that were pending during the proceedings.
In a separate press release titled “QUANTRON Relaunches after Insolvency – Sustainable, Strengthened, and Future-Oriented,” the company avoided discussing the restructuring details but pledged to share more information in the coming weeks. A press conference is scheduled for the second quarter of 2025 to outline the revised strategy and upcoming projects.
Source: Electrive