PDA

View Full Version

: GM Said to Plan June 1 Bankruptcy as Debt Plan Gains


wahyinghung
05-28-2009, 03:50 PM
May 28 (Bloomberg) -- General Motors Corp., the world’s largest automaker until its 77-year reign ended in 2008, plans to file for bankruptcy protection on June 1 and sell most of its assets to a new company, people familiar with the matter said.

GM’s path will be smoothed by an accord today giving some of its biggest bondholders an equity stake in the reorganized automaker. The U.S. Treasury is requiring that an unspecified percentage of debt holders accept the terms by 5 p.m. New York time on May 30, Detroit-based GM said in a regulatory filing.

“If bondholders agree to this up front, this would essentially be a prepackaged bankruptcy,” said Shelly Lombard, an analyst with New York-based bond-research firm Gimme Credit LLC. “GM could exit Chapter 11 faster.”

Battered by almost $88 billion in losses since 2004, GM fell short in a bid to cut debt by $44 billion under a U.S.-set June 1 deadline to restructure outside court. The 100-year-old automaker seeks to rebuild around assets such as the Cadillac and Chevrolet brands as it follows Chrysler LLC into bankruptcy.

The people familiar with GM’s plans didn’t specify where the automaker might make its Chapter 11 filing. They asked not to be identified because the details aren’t public.

Vice Chairman Bob Lutz, while not confirming GM’s intentions or a possible bankruptcy venue, said any court restructuring would be quick.

‘Pay It Back’

“We intend to get in and out very soon,” he said today at an Automotive Press Association luncheon in Detroit. “The U.S. government wants its money back, and our plan is to pay it back as quickly as possible. The U.S. government doesn’t want to own auto companies.”

The bankruptcy probably would last 60 to 90 days, said an Obama administration official who asked not to be identified because the talks are private. The Treasury will finance the trip through bankruptcy with about $50 billion, which includes $19.4 billion in current borrowing, GM said in a statement.

GM’s bankruptcy will be the third-biggest in U.S. history after Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. and WorldCom Inc., based on GM’s reported global assets of $91 billion and total liabilities of $176.4 billion as of Dec. 31. Chrysler, which sought court protection on April 30, listed assets of $39 billion.

Going to court would end the suspense for GM, which said it expected to declare bankruptcy after failing to get enough support for a debt-for-equity exchange on $27.2 billion in unsecured bonds.

Sweetened Offer

Only 15 percent of bondholders approved the offer to trade their debt for a 10 percent stake in the new company, a person familiar with the matter said. GM sweetened the plan today to promise warrants good for buying 15 percent more of the new enterprise, which would have an improved balance sheet based on a U.S. plan to trade bailout loans for equity.

Another 20 percent of bondholders now support the swap, according to a statement from their ad hoc committee today.

Bondholders would lose some or all of the warrants and their 10 percent stake in the new GM entity unless the company wins sufficient support from those investors to satisfy the Treasury, GM said in the regulatory filing.

The government will make a “judgment call” on May 30 as to whether bondholder backing for the latest proposal is sufficient, the administration official said.

The accord with bondholders marks “another important step” in GM’s restructuring, another administration official said in Washington. President Barack Obama set the June 1 deadline after the government began propping up GM with emergency loans.

New Owners

The filing shows the U.S. Treasury owning 72.5 percent of equity in the new GM, a union health-care trust with 17.5 percent and 10 percent going to the old GM to hand to creditors in the bankruptcy process.

Creditors would have warrants to buy as much as 15 percent of the company through newly issued shares in two portions. The first 7.5 percent would become available when GM’s market value reaches $15 billion and the remainder at $30 billion, according to regulatory filings.

GM’s market capitalization last exceeded $30 billion in January 2004, according to Bloomberg data. The value at yesterday’s closing stock price was $702 million.

According to the filing, the debt at the new GM would consist of $8 billion in new Treasury loans, $2.5 billion owed to the United Auto Workers fund and $6.5 billion in dividend- paying preferred stock. The Treasury will get $2.5 billion in preferred shares that pay a 9 percent annual dividend, bringing the issuance to $9 billion in preferred stock.

Bonds, Shares

GM’s 8.375 percent bonds due in July 2033 rose 3.88 cents to 11 cents on the dollar as of 5:06 p.m. in New York, the highest closing price in seven weeks, according to Trace, the bond-pricing service of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority. The yield was 96.8 percent.

The shares rose 15 cents, or 13 percent, to $1.30 at 4:09 p.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. The stock has fallen 59 percent this year.

A portion of the debt financing for the new GM may be provided by the governments of Ontario and Canada, according to the filing. In that case, those governments would receive part of the preferred stock and common equity of the new company allocated for the Treasury.

GM wants to scrap the Pontiac line, sell its Hummer and Saturn units, and drop as many as 2,400 U.S. dealers by the end of 2010. Its Saab Automobile unit is in bankruptcy protection in Sweden, and the Opel division in Europe is up for sale.

Federal Recovery

The administration is optimistic about prospects for recovering taxpayer dollars being invested in GM’s restructuring, according to the official who discussed the timetable for the automaker’s stay in court.

The official didn’t know how much may be recovered and wasn’t certain about amounts invested during the George W. Bush administration. GM would be a private company for a time under the restructuring plan currently envisioned, the official said.

Chrysler may leave court protection as soon as next week under a plan to create a streamlined entity run by Italy’s Fiat SpA, based on the official’s prediction earlier this week that the automaker’s time in bankruptcy might be only about 30 days.

GM reached a tentative agreement with the UAW on May 21 to modify a 2007 labor contract and a day later arrived at a similar accord with the Canadian Auto Workers to keep alive operations in that country.

UAW members are voting this week on the contract changes and a plan to shrink GM’s obligation to a union-run trust fund for retirees’ medical expenses.

GM ceded the global auto sales crown last year to Toyota Motor Corp. and hasn’t posted an annual profit since 2004. GM’s U.S. sales have fell for 18 months in a row through April.
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=a7i7hg48BfNY&refer=home

orange7
05-28-2009, 06:46 PM
err.. and after all this trouble, they sitll go into bankruptcy..

dark0821
05-28-2009, 07:12 PM
ai.. well just means other companys will take over i guess..

hk20000
05-29-2009, 01:36 AM
I totally called it when they first got the package. UAW = no way to get out of this. US people got raped of their tax dollars and brought more unnecessary debt upon themselves.

time_traveller
05-29-2009, 10:01 AM
hasn’t posted an annual profit since 2004.

Sounds like a great investment for the US government, it's right up there with the war on terror. :haha:

Timpo
05-29-2009, 11:16 AM
Rick Wagoner: "bankruptcy is not an option"

q0192837465
05-29-2009, 01:01 PM
hahaha, I wonder what will happen to the pension funds? Will they be wiped out? if that's the case I feel sorry for those guys.

orange7
05-29-2009, 03:52 PM
hahaha, I wonder what will happen to the pension funds? Will they be wiped out? if that's the case I feel sorry for those guys.

say that again?
you feel sorry for ppl with little to no education who made $80/hr before they retired?

MarkyMark
05-29-2009, 04:17 PM
say that again?
you feel sorry for ppl with little to no education who made $80/hr before they retired?

What does it matter if they had no education? Back in their day going to college wasn't nearly as much as a necessity as it is now.

orange7
05-29-2009, 06:04 PM
What does it matter if they had no education? Back in their day going to college wasn't nearly as much as a necessity as it is now.

true...

so if we don't resign luongo, are we going to have labarba or corey to play for us?

Volvo-brickster
05-29-2009, 08:31 PM
stock closed at $0.75 today

wonder what it will be when monday rolls around

Gt-R R34
05-29-2009, 09:27 PM
0.04cents!

some_punk
05-29-2009, 11:11 PM
say that again?
you feel sorry for ppl with little to no education who made $80/hr before they retired?

Pretty much it is the UAW's fault that GM is in this situation.

Mancini
05-29-2009, 11:12 PM
The government should pony up many billions of dollars to delay GM's imminent demise until next year. Not really.

orange7
05-30-2009, 12:41 AM
0.04cents!

nice.. i'll start buying their stocks at 0.04 cents! haha.. cheap stocks

Timpo
05-31-2009, 11:14 AM
if GM goes bankrupt, what would happend to whatever the share you're holding?

do they just disappear?

sky52
05-31-2009, 11:58 AM
history repeated itself....this shit happened back in the 70's as well with them and chrysler i believe.

dark0821
05-31-2009, 12:09 PM
sigh.. buying GM stocks.. i dunno abt that..

orange7
05-31-2009, 06:30 PM
sigh.. buying GM stocks.. i dunno abt that..

why not?
they are so cheap! 0.04cents..
i'm downn.. and i can legally be a shareholder.. haha.. maybe i can buy enough stocks and become a CEO at my age!

Volvo-brickster
05-31-2009, 07:59 PM
why not?
they are so cheap! 0.04cents..
i'm downn.. and i can legally be a shareholder.. haha.. maybe i can buy enough stocks and become a CEO at my age!

uh....its no where close to $0.04 cents right now

http://www.google.ca/finance?q=nyse+gm

http://www.sanebull.com/m?symbol=gm

orange7
05-31-2009, 09:03 PM
uh....its no where close to $0.04 cents right now

http://www.google.ca/finance?q=nyse+gm

http://www.sanebull.com/m?symbol=gm

when it does get to 0.04cents, i'll buy a shitload of their stocks!

tiger_handheld
05-31-2009, 09:27 PM
Did anyone catch "who killed the electric car?" on CBC tonight?

Man after watching that and knowing what they did, i want them to go under. GM had a fully function, consumer demanded, electric vehicle 2years ahead of toyota & honda. n wtf they do, they didnt let ppl renew their lease, and crushed all the cars... WTF!! WTF!! and now they want money to make more fuel efficient cars.... and the CAD gov't wants to own 12% ... garrr... arghh!!

/end rant

Great68
06-01-2009, 08:33 AM
Government Motors.

asian_XL
06-01-2009, 09:02 AM
I would rather buy AIG or Citigroup

fuck google, it went back up to 425...

dark0821
06-01-2009, 09:02 AM
oh realli? damn who that fucked over the eectric cars than.. i hope he is diggin a hole.. cuz they will be alot of GM employees on his ass...

BNR32_Coupe
06-01-2009, 11:50 AM
Sounds like a great investment for the US government, it's right up there with the war on terror. :haha:

you kidding me? the war on terror was a success, gas prices are finally bearable. fuck the bandwagon, our future kids, the blood shed for oil, morals and ethics, i want cheaper gas now! if it wasnt for that stupid war that cost americans so much, we'd be paying upwards of $1.75/L right now

wahyinghung
06-01-2009, 10:13 PM
General Motors Corp. was bailed out Monday with $40-billion (U.S.) in loans from the U.S., Canadian and Ontario governments as part of a massive, two-stage, government-dictated restructuring designed to transform Detroit auto makers into environmental leaders.

The end of the first stage was GM's Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection filing Monday, which puts the company on solid financial footing.

It came just hours after a court-approved buyout of Chrysler LLC that will give it a new lease on life as part of a global empire with deep pockets.

The second stage in a U.S. policy that is reshaping Detroit is a plan to turn the three auto makers into lean, green companies offering more fuel-efficient vehicles.

Such a radical shift from gas-guzzling but profit-spinning pickups and sport utility vehicles to smaller, more fuel-efficient cars would usually take 10 years, but U.S. President Barack Obama has ordered it compressed, said industry analyst William Pochiluk, president of AutomotiveCompass LLC.

“It's a huge risk. It's a gamble,” Mr. Pochiluk said Monday.
Mr. Obama said the U.S. government has no interest in running GM, but he added several times in an address at the White House that GM must produce fuel-efficient vehicles.

“I'm confident that the steps I'm announcing today will mark the end of an old GM and the beginning of a new GM, a new GM that can produce the high-quality, safe and fuel-efficient cars of tomorrow, that can lead America toward an energy-independent future and that is once more a symbol of America's success,” Mr. Obama said.

He is using auto makers “to reshape the way Americans drive and the way they interact with the environment,” said Dimitry Anastakis, a history professor at Trent University in Peterborough, Ont., and author of a book on the 1965 Canada-U.S. Auto Pact.

U.S., Canadian and Ontario taxpayers will own 72.5 per cent of the new GM that will emerge from bankruptcy protection having shed tens of thousands of U.S. employees, once-prominent brands such as Saturn and Hummer, and billions of dollars in crushing debt.

The federal and Ontario governments are receiving 12 per cent of the common shares in the new GM in return for $10.6-billion (Canadian) in financial assistance. The governments also receive about $1.3-billion in debt and some preferred shares in the new company.
But Prime Minister Stephen Harper held out almost no hope Monday that the bulk of the money will be repaid.

“Clearly, taxpayers will get some money back when the day comes that we begin to sell our equity share, but to be frank, we are not counting on that,” Mr. Harper told reporters. “We are not factoring that into our budgetary plans.”

Nonetheless, the $10.6-billion was the price of admission if Canada wanted to retain GM plants in the Ontario cities of Oshawa and St. Catharines and thousands of jobs at auto parts makers, he said.

What motivated the governments to participate in the bailout was the spectre of GM closing up shop in Ontario and shifting all of its production to the United States, Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty added.

“We looked at the other side,” Mr. McGuinty told reporters. “If you think this side's dark, take a look at the other side to understand the full economic consequences of that.”

As part of the Chapter 11 filing, GM will be split into two companies. One will hold assets and brands that GM wants to jettison, such as Saturn, Hummer, Saab, Pontiac and likely most of the 14 additional plants that GM announced yesterday will be shut or idled. The Wall Street Journal reported that GM will announce the tentative sale of the Hummer brand today.

The new GM will consist of four divisions, Chevrolet, Buick, Cadillac and GMC, as well as the assets of General Motors of Canada Ltd. that are not slated for closing.

The point is to reduce costs drastically to make GM competitive and able to generate profit before interest and taxes when U.S. vehicle sales are as low as 10 million annually, GM chief executive officer Fritz Henderson said at a news conference in New York.

In the past two years, with U.S. vehicle sales considerably higher than that – 13.2 million last year and 16.1 million in 2007 – GM lost a staggering $70-billion.

“The new GM will have a significantly stronger and healthier balance sheet, which will allow us to better support our brands and products through investment, increase our investment in new technology and be able to weather difficult times,” Mr. Henderson told reporters.

In return for the financial help, GM promised the federal and Ontario governments that its Canadian operations would retain 16 per cent of GM's North American vehicle production until 2016.

The company will be required to make a $4-billion (Canadian) up-front payment to address a shortfall of about $7-billion in its pension plans. In addition, GM will inject $200-million annually into the pension plans over the next five years, making them fully solvent.

The auto maker has also agreed to invest $2.2-billion at its Canadian operations over the next seven years. That includes production of a new, fuel-efficient, front-wheel-drive transmission in St. Catharines.

The deal does not, however, include a commitment on how many employees GM will retain in Canada.

Industry Minister Tony Clement conceded the equity investment is more risky than a secured loan.

Under the deal, GM will have an initial public offering in 2010. Canadian governments must divest 35 per cent of their stock within three years, 65 per cent within six years, and the rest within eight years – regardless of the share price and potential for taxpayers' losses. Officials said that there is a certain flexibility around the timing of the share sale, but those minimums must be met regardless of the state of the economy at the time.

Federal officials could not say at what level GM shares would need to be trading for the governments to break even on the investment. In fact, they said governments had not done such an analysis.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/gm-faces-high-stakes-high-costs-and-high-hopes/article1164148/