Showing posts with label Chrysler Fiat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chrysler Fiat. Show all posts

Monday, November 23, 2009

Chrysler Group LLC will translate into dazzling stock market success


Fiat may get mileage from Chrysler after all

Maybe, just maybe, Fiat Group SpA's link with Chrysler Group LLC will translate into dazzling stock market success.

While some investment analysts think Chrysler is unsalvageable, and therefore of no use to Fiat, others are now taking the view that Chrysler is a turnaround story in the making, one that could lift the Italian auto makers' fortunes....More
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Wednesday, July 15, 2009

Where Will the Fiat/Dodge 500 be Built?


The Local 4 Detroit TV News reported that Fiat is looking at producing the Fiat 500 at Warren,Michigan the Dodge Ram Truck Plant or Belvidere Ill. the Dodge Caliber plant.

The Chrysler engineers have been studying the Tychy Poland plant were the Fiat 500 is currently produced. The Tychy Plant produces about 500,000 Fiat 500s a year. The Belvidere Ill. plant can only produce about 265,000 A year.

The Dodge Ram Truck plant in Warren Michigan is a large facility. It also has it's stamping plant attached and a large shipping yard. The Warren Truck is capable of building 1100 full size trucks a day.

Which this plant could give Chrysler-Fiat the capacity it needs to produce 4 different models of the 500 and high volume.
Hopefully Chrysler-Fiat decides to build the Fiat 500 in the United States, but they better make a move soon.
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Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Chrysler Fiat News-Obama praises autoworkers, says Chrysler deal uncertain


President Barack Obama said today he did not know whether a deal preventing a collapse of Chrysler LLC would be done before Thursday's deadline, and praised American autoworkers for their sacrifices to the industry's survival.

Speaking at a town hall meeting in Missouri marking his 100th day in office, Obama said his auto task force sent Chrysler and General Motors Corp. back to redo their business plans because their initial sustainability plans were not realistic. GM has until June 1 to deliver its new plan.

As for Chrysler: “We don’t know yet whether the deal is going to get done.”


Chrysler and the administration reached an agreement with large Chrysler debt holders to swap $6.9 billion in secured debt for $2 billion in cash. But 40-odd investment firms and hedge funds have to agree in unison to the swap, or the government will take Chrysler to bankruptcy court to force it into place.

Chrysler must also complete a deal with Fiat S.p.A., which appears close at hand.....More
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Sunday, April 19, 2009

Chrysler Demands A $19 Per Hour Wage Cut


Chrysler CAW workers are in protest and rightfully so.

Friday CAW workers were told they must make an impossible decision to save Chrysler Canada a $19 per hour Wage cut!

Chrysler Canada workers burned CEO Nardelli's Letter to employees and told Chrysler no way could they cut hourly wages by $19 per hour.

Chrysler claims it will pull operations out of Canada if the Union does not meet it's demands.

The new soon to be Chrysler CEO Sergio Marchionne makes the same case for the UAW.

Fiat has stated that If it does not take significant hour wage concessions it will walk away from the Chrysler deal and let Chrysler go bankrupt. Once Chrysler goes bankrupt it can buy up what it wants. More than likely that would only be two assembly plants and the dealer network.

Which this the most likely scenario for US Chrysler autoworkers.
The UAW will go down to the second tier rate that was negotiated in 2007 of $14.50 for assembly workers and $17.50 for Skilled Trades workers.

That is a $15 per hour wage cut and that is huge!

The next two weeks are going to be unbearable for Chrysler Workers.

Someone save the middle class.......
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Monday, March 30, 2009

Chrysler’s Nardelli Is Said to Have Been Allowed to Stay in Job


March 30 (Bloomberg) -- Chrysler LLC Chief Executive Officer Robert Nardelli hasn’t been asked to step down ahead of today’s U.S. government announcement about plans for the automaker, people familiar with the discussions said.

General Motors Corp. CEO Rick Wagoner will leave at the request of the Obama administration, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the matter is private. The companies are surviving with a combined $17.4 billion in U.S. aid, $4 billion of which went to Chrysler.

Chrysler will be told today that it must complete a planned alliance with Italy’s Fiat SpA to gain access to small-car technology in exchange for giving up a 35 percent equity stake, according to a government official.

With the U.S. not seeking a management change, Nardelli, 60, will get a chance to continue efforts to return Chrysler to profit. Chrysler owner Cerberus Capital Management LP hired the former Home Depot Inc. CEO in August 2007 after buying 80 percent of the third-largest U.S. automaker.

Chrysler said it lost $8 billion in 2008 as the U.S. auto market sank to a 16-year low. The Auburn Hills, Michigan-based automaker’s domestic sales tumbled 55 percent in January and 44 percent in February and asked for $5 billion more in U.S. aid. Chrysler Corp., as it was known then, took out $1.2 billion in government-backed loans in 1980 and repaid the money in 1983. ....More
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Friday, March 6, 2009

Obama auto task force to come to Detroit next week


Article about Auto Task Force From The Detroit Free Press
WASHINGTON -- Leaders of President Barack Obama’s auto task force will travel to Detroit next week to meet with industry and labor officials worried about an imminent collapse of several companies absent federal aid.

An administration official said final details of the trip were still being worked out, but the task force visitors will include advisers Steven Rattner and Ron Bloom.


The task force has been conducting a string of meetings over the past two weeks to gather information and assess the depth of the problems facing the industry. General Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC have said they need a total of $7 billion before the end of the month to avoid bankruptcy, and several suppliers are also on the brink.


Fiat Chief Executive Sergio Marchionne met with Rattner, Bloom and other members of the task force for two and a half hours today to discuss Fiat’s proposed alliance with Chrysler. Fiat has said it would take a 35% stake in Chrysler in return for sharing vehicle designs that could be used for several new Chrysler models.

Buy The Domain Name AutoTaskForce.Com-Website
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Thursday, January 22, 2009

Chrysler News:U.S. $3 billion loan part of Chrysler-Fiat deal


DETROIT (Reuters) – Chrysler LLC's deal with Fiat SpA (FIA.MI) depends on the U.S. automaker receiving an additional $3 billion emergency loan from the U.S. government, the company's product development chief said on Wednesday.

"I think that is part of the deal," Frank Klegon said when asked if the automaker needed the additional $3 billion for the Fiat deal to be completed. "That is part of the process. The expectation is that that is an important part of it."

Chrysler, which had asked for $7 billion, received $4 billion U.S. emergency loan on January 2. The automaker has said it is counting on getting the rest of the money to keep operating.

Klegon believed the $3 billion of additional government aid was part of a term sheet Chrysler had with Fiat on the alliance. Chrysler has been calling the request for additional support a second tranche, or the second half of the original $7 billion of aid it sought late last year.

Chrysler, owned by private equity firm Cerberus Capital Management, announced on Monday an alliance with Fiat that would give the Italian automaker a 35 percent stake in Chrysler in exchange for access to its technology and overseas markets.

Fiat would help Chrysler put together the restructuring plan Chrysler has to submit to the U.S. government by February 17.

Klegon said the U.S. Treasury had been alerted to the deal and he hoped it would approve of the agreement.

Klegon said discussions had been going on with Fiat on the product side for some time.

"I had no knowledge there was a bigger discussion going on," he said, adding the deal does not bar the automaker from other alliances.

Klegon said Chrysler's alliance with Nissan Motor Co Ltd (7201.T) that would provide small cars to Chrysler and large trucks to Nissan was still going forward, as was Chrysler's minivan production for Volkswagen AG (VOWG.DE).

Klegon did not know if Chrysler would keep all three brands, but, ultimately, that would not be the product development chief's call.

"Cerberus are the guys making the deals. They are the ones who at the end of the day negotiate with Fiat," he said. "We are obviously engaged as the operating side and the product side, but the actual deal is under Cerberus leadership."

Under the terms of the deal, which has to be approved by the U.S. government, Fiat would not pay cash for its stake in Chrysler.

Chrysler's sales tumbled 30 percent in 2008 and it ended the year with only $2 billion in cash and reliant on a government bailout to stay afloat.

Chrysler, which owns the Jeep, Dodge and Chrysler brands, is 80.1 percent owned by Cerberus, which paid $7.4 billion for its stake in 2007. Former Chrysler parent Daimler AG (DAIGn.DE) holds the rest of Chrysler and is looking to sell its stake.

Daimler has written down the value of its remaining 19.9 percent stake in Chrysler to zero.

Fiat has said it could raise its stake beyond the initial 35 percent, but that step would depend on the success of Chrysler's restructuring.

(Reporting by Poornima Gupta and David Bailey; Editing by Andre Grenon)
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Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Chrysler Fiat Merger


From Forbes Jerry Flint

The announced deal between Chrysler and Fiat has benefits for both, but it is not a game changer--not yet.

The alignment between Fiat of Italy and Chrysler does not exactly save Chrysler, but it gives Fiat an entry into the U.S. In short, Fiat is to get 35% of Chrysler, will not pay any cash for the stake, and it will give Chrysler access to its technology.

Fiat (nyse: FIA - news - people ) had publicly said it wanted a production base in North America for its Alfa Romeo brand--and presumably the Fiat brand, too. Through its 35% interest that it is getting in Chrysler, it would presumably have access to a U.S. plant to build its cars.

The chief executive of Fiat, Sergio Marchionne, has also worried that his company was not big enough to survive in today's world. Marchionne was born in Italy in 1952 but built his early career in Canada and has dual Canadian and Italian citizenship. Chrysler has some Canadian plants, and the Canadian autoworkers union, separated from the American UAW, has been quite cooperative in working with the industry in recent years.

So at no cash cost, Fiat may have its production base on this continent. What about Chrysler? The company has been weak technically and does not have enough money to finance the kind of new vehicle programs that Chrysler needs to stay competitive in this market.

Fiat is strong in small cars and in their engines and transmissions, as well as in luxury cars and diesel engines. Getting the technology could be a huge help for Chrysler, but the American company will still need the money and ability to create new cars even with Fiat technology.

The alliance might help Chrysler if it needs to get more money from the American government in its battle to survive.

Chrysler's strength has been in sport utility vehicles, pickup trucks and minivans. We do not know Fiat's degree of interest in these businesses. Meanwhile, another foreign maker, Nissan (nasdaq: NSANY - news - people ) (which is part of the Renault/Nissan alliance) has an agreement with Chrysler whereby Nissan is to get a version of the Dodge Ram, a big pickup, and Nissan is to build small cars destined for Chrysler....More
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