Showing posts with label Carmakers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Carmakers. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Chrysler Bankruptcy News:Analysts Say Carmakers' plans need more time


From Detnews.Com
March 31 deadline too soon to get bondholders on board with Chrysler, GM changes, they say.
Alisa Priddle and David Shepardson / The Detroit News
As General Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC are scurrying to put the finishing touches on their restructuring plans due next Tuesday to the Treasury, finance and auto industry experts say submitting plans is one thing, but getting bondholders and all other parties involved in a massive restructuring to agree to those plans by the March 31 deadline seems unrealistic.

Meanwhile, GM CEO Rick Wagoner lobbies key lawmakers in Washington today to ease the way for GM's plan.

"I wouldn't be surprised if the timetable got extended, because clearly the original plan was a temporary fix," said Mark Oline, a Fitch Ratings analyst in Chicago. "It was going to be up to the new Congress and Administration to put in a longer-term solution."

Auto analysts and bankruptcy lawyers say the deadline set out in the federal bailout of the automakers is too ambitious to get bondholders on board in just a few more weeks. They say GM in particular needs an extension to avoid being forced into bankruptcy if it can't show progress on its assignment to cut $27.5 billion of unsecured debt down to about $9.2 billion by the end of March.

The concern centers around GM because the public company has many junk bonds and unsecured creditors, said Judy O'Neill, partner with Foley & Lardner LLP's Detroit office and an expert on Chapter 11 bankruptcy....More
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Friday, December 19, 2008

Auto Rescue: Bush to Give Low-Interest Loans to Carmakers


The White House has decided to come to the rescue of General Motors and Chrysler by providing them with $17.4 billion in low-interest loans to keep them afloat, ABC News has learned.

The money for the loans will come from the Troubled Asset Relief Program fund, signed into law this fall to bail out the financial industry. The president will provide $13.4 billion in short-term financing in December and January and plans to make another $4 billion available in February, provided it can reach into the second half of the $700 billion TARP fund to do so.

The deal also includes as a non-binding "target" a key provisions, including making work rules and wages competitive with workers at foreign car companies in the U.S.

Chrysler CEO Bob Nardelli issued a statement saying the company was grateful for the helping hand and that, "Chrysler is committed to meeting these requirements."

Pressure had been building for President Bush to act. Chrysler temporarily shut down all of its plants earlier this week to save money, and GM delayed construction on a new plant for the same reason. And House Speaker Nancy Pelosi urged Bush on Thursday to make a decision because the nation's weakened economy could not risk a massive wave of layoffs.

"This is a difficult time for a free-market person," Bush said Thursday. "Under ordinary circumstances, failed entities, failing entities should be allowed to fail. I have concluded these are not ordinary circumstances, for a lot of reasons... We got to the point where if a major institution were to fail, there is great likelihood that there'd be a ripple effect throughout the world, and the average person would be really hurt."

Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson told a business forum in New York Thursday night it was too risky to simply let the automakers fail.

"When you look at the size of this industry and look at all those that it touches in terms of suppliers and dealers… it would seem to be an imprudent risk to take," he said....More
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