Showing posts with label auto task force. Show all posts
Showing posts with label auto task force. Show all posts

Friday, April 17, 2009

GM, Chrysler in line for more federal aid from The Auto Task Force


Chrysler in line for $500M more; GM weighs fate of Pontiac, GMC

Robert Snell and David Shepardson / The Detroit News
Washington -- The Obama auto task force is preparing to loan General Motors Corp. about $5 billion in additional federal short-term aid, and Chrysler LLC $500 million, an Obama administration official familiar with the matter said Thursday.

The disclosure assigns a dollar amount to the pledge of continued short-term support issued late last month by the administration, after it rejected GM's and Chrysler's restructuring plans and requests for up to $21.6 billion in additional assistance. The official said the decision was expected to be announced next week -- though the precise amounts were still the subject of talks between the government and the automakers.

The White House said Thursday night no decision had been made about how much either automaker will receive. "No decisions have been made on how much working capital GM and Chrysler will be getting," said spokeswoman Amy Brundage...More
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Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Will the Auto Task Force Be On Chrysler's New Board?


Chrysler and potential partner Fiat are discussing a new management and board for the U.S. automaker under a proposed alliance that could see Fiat take a stake in Chrysler, Automotive News reported on Monday.

Chrysler is racing to complete a partnership with the Italian automaker by April 30, with the Obama administration warning the alternative would be bankruptcy.

The two automakers are discussing a new seven-member board for Chrysler that would include representatives from Fiat and possibly President Barack Obama’s automotive task force overseeing the restructuring of the auto industry, Automotive News reported, citing sources close to the negotiations.
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Monday, April 13, 2009

Auto Task Force-GM told to prep for bankruptcy filing


WASHINGTON, April 12 (Reuters ) – The U.S. Treasury Department is directing General Motors to lay the groundwork for a bankruptcy filing by June 1, even though the automaker has publicly stated it could reorganize outside of court, The New York Times reported on Sunday.

GM is operating under emergency U.S. government loans. It has been told by the Obama administration's task force overseeing its bailout that it must cut costs and reduce its debts in order to continue to receive aid.

The White House-appointed autos task force has given GM 60 days to come up with a restructuring plan and it is trying to determine whether the automaker can be a viable company.

Quoting sources who had been briefed on the GM plans, the Times said the goal was to prepare for a fast "surgical" bankruptcy.

The newspaper said preparations are aimed at assuring a GM bankruptcy filing is ready if the company is unable to reach agreement with bondholders to exchange roughly $28 billion in debt into equity in GM and with the United Automobile Workers union.

A plan under consideration would create a new company that would buy the "good" assets of GM after the carmaker files for bankruptcy, the Times said.

Less desirable assets, including unwanted brands, factories and health care obligations, would be left in the old company, which could be liquidated over several years, according to the paper.

Treasury officials are examining one potential outcome in which the viable GM enters and exits bankruptcy protection in as little as two weeks, using $5 billion to $7 billion in federal financing, a person briefed on the matter told the Times.

The Times sources declined to be identified because they were not authorized to discuss the process. Both GM and Treasury Department officials declined to comment, the newspaper said.

Last week, GM's chief executive said the automaker wanted to restructure out of court, but also preparing for a bankruptcy filing.
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Monday, April 6, 2009

Will The Auto Task Force Split Chrysler Up To The Creditors?


Latest Article from the Detroit Free Press

Fiat would own biggest slice of Chrysler under latest scenario proposed by U.S.

Instead of Cerberus Capital Management and Daimler AG holding 80.1% and 19.9%, respectively, of Chrysler LLC, there will be a larger cast.

Under the latest scenario proposed by the U.S. government, Fiat SpA will have the largest block of Chrysler, at 20%. The remaining 80% will be allocated among a variety of secured creditors that include at least five banks and U.S. taxpayers.

Cerberus and Daimler likely will hold much smaller stakes because they still hold loans that helped finance the August 2007 acquisition of the Auburn Hills-based automaker.

Even the UAW could end up owning a piece of the company.

"They are trying to trade debt for equity among the current creditors," said Tom Stallkamp, a former DaimlerChrysler vice chairman and president. He is now a partner in Ripplewood Holdings LLC, a private equity fund. "It's all based on how much of a haircut the debt holders will accept."

Coincidentally, those debt holders include some of the giant banks -- J.P. Morgan Chase, Citicorp, Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs -- that auto industry advocates argue have benefitted from a double standard in how they accounted for government loans.

Debt-for-equity talks
There are three levels of Chrysler debt secured by such assets as manufacturing plants, equipment, vehicles, parts and real estate. The first level, valued by Chrysler at $6.9 billion, was borrowed from the banks. The second is $2 billion borrowed from Daimler ($1.5 billion) and Cerberus ($500 million). The third is the $4.3 billion in government loans committed in December and January.

If Chrysler were to file for bankruptcy, the banks would be first in line to sell assets, followed by Cerberus and Daimler, and finally the federal government.

"This is the worst possible time to be selling an auto plant," said Shelly Lombard, a credit analyst with Gimme Credit in New York.

Chrysler, Fiat and President Barack Obama's auto task force are working hard to avoid that outcome. To succeed, they must secure breakthrough agreements with the banks and the UAW. Then, the task force has said it would release up to $6 billion more to fund Chrysler's operations.


Unlike GM, which is dealing primarily with bondholders, Chrysler's debt is owed to banks and the government. Some of the bank loans have been sold to hedge funds and other investors. "It's hard to know who bought what, even with bonds, and it's harder still with bank loans," Lombard said.


One of the banks likely will act as an agent for the hedge funds. Then, the task force leaders, Steven Rattner and Ron Bloom, will negotiate for a settlement that offers the banks a fraction of the loans' face value in exchange for shares in the new Chrysler.

Challenges ahead
Fiat so far has not offered cash and has said it will not assume any current debt to partner with Chrysler. While Chrysler has valued Fiat's vehicles and powertrain technology at $8 billion to $10 billion, that won't likely satisfy the banks.

"Fiat is in many ways a reasonable long-term solution," said Craig Fitzgerald of Plante & Moran. "The big question is will $6 billion more from taxpayers be enough to fund Chrysler's turnaround."

The challenge with the UAW is to find a non-cash method to cover half of $10.6 billion Chrysler owes in 2010 to the Voluntary Employee Beneficiary Association, or VEBA, trust fund. The trust was created to cover health care insurance for UAW retirees.

If Fiat doesn't offer cash or its own stock, Chrysler may offer the union stock in the new company. Such a deal would save $5.3 billion, which could be enough to satisfy Obama's demand for more concessions, and bring the UAW into partnership with banks, taxpayers, Cerberus and Fiat.....More
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Monday, March 30, 2009

White House questions viability of GM, Chrysler



WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama said Monday that neither General Motors nor Chrysler has proposed sweeping enough changes to justify further large federal bailouts, and demanded "painful concessions" from creditors, unions and others as their price for survival.

Obama also raised the possibility of a controlled bankruptcy to help either or both "restructure quickly and emerge stronger" — uttering the term that industry and union officials have warned repeatedly could lead to the collapse of an entire domestic industry.

With his words, Obama underscored the extent to which the government is now dictating terms to two of the country's iconic corporations — forcing the departure of Rick Wagoner as CEO of General Motors, and bluntly warning it may pull the plug on either or both companies.

The Bush administration late last year approved $17 billion in federal funds to help GM and Chrysler survive. It also demanded both companies submit restructuring plans that the Obama administration would review.

Even as he pronounced their effort unsatisfactory, the president said the administration will offer General Motors "adequate working capital" over the next 60 days to produce a reorganization plan acceptable to the administration.

He said Chrysler's situation is more perilous, and the government will give the company 30 days to overcome hurdles to a merger with Fiat, the Italian automaker. If they are successful "we will consider lending up to $6 billion to help their plan succeed," he said.

Obama spoke at the White House with the Big 3 standing at yet another crossroads. As the president noted, the industry has shed over 400,000 jobs in the past year as the recession took hold. Officials announced last week bailout funds would be made available to companies that supply the automakers, an attempt to keep them afloat.

Obama said he is committed to the survival of an auto industry — on terms that will allow it to compete internationally.

"But we also cannot continue to excuse poor decisions," he said. "And we cannot make the survival of our auto industry dependent on an unending flow of tax dollars."

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Auto Task Force to take hands-on role in GM, Chrysler restructuring



David Shepardson / Detroit News Washington Bureau
Washington -- The Obama administration will take a much more hands-on role in the restructuring of General Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC, providing both with short-term aid but insisting on and overseeing immediate dramatic changes.

The administration has set strict timetables for GM and Chrysler to complete restructuring and if required changes are not made is likely to force the automakers into bankruptcy in the coming months.

The companies are likely to go even further in cutting staff and closing plants in order to prove their viability.

The administration's auto task force agreed to provide Chrysler with short-term aid for the next 30 days as the automaker works to complete a tie-up with Itay's Fiat SpA and said it would consider loaning the partnership up to $6 billion if a deal can be finalized.

But it warned that if Chrysler and Fiat cannot come to terms on a partnership, the Auburn Hills automaker would not get any more taxpayer money -- a move that would likely force the company's liquidation....more
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Saturday, March 28, 2009

Auto Task Force Will Demand More Fuel Efficient Vehicles



Article From The Detroit News

New fuel rules to cost autos $1.5B
Higher mileage standards for ailing automakers will increase new vehicle price tags $64 to $126.

David Shepardson / The Detroit News
WASHINGTON -- Stricter fuel economy standards outlined Friday by the federal government for the 2011 model year will cost struggling auto companies nearly $1.5 billion and boost the cost of passenger vehicles an average of $64 for cars and $126 for light trucks.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said the additional vehicle cost will be recouped by buyers of pickups, SUVs and minivans, through fuel savings, in an average of 7.7 years. Passenger car buyers will recover that cost in an average of 4.4 years.

"These standards are important steps in the nation's quest to achieve energy independence and bring more fuel efficient vehicles to American families," said Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood.

The Corporate Average Fuel Economy rules set by the Obama administration pegged the 2011 passenger car standard at 30.2 miles per gallon and the light truck standard at 24.1 mpg.

Overall vehicle efficiency climbs to 27.3 mpg in the 2011 model year, up 8 percent over the 2010 model year.....More
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With The Auto Task Force Desision -Fiat CEO says Chrysler proposal will change


Article From The Detroit Free Press

Fiat CEO says Chrysler proposal will change
Ownership stake may be adjusted

Fiat CEO Sergio Marchionne said a proposal for the Italian automaker to take a 35% stake in Chrysler will change in unspecified ways as the companies await a decision as early as Tuesday by President Barack Obama's auto task force that could determine whether the partnership moves forward....More
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Friday, March 27, 2009

Auto Task Force and Obama Say Major Restructuring Ahead


Obama on autos: Aid ahead but at a price
GM, Chrysler updating plans for revival

WASHINGTON -- Heading toward Monday's announcement of his plans to help Detroit's auto industry, President Barack Obama said Thursday that the carmakers would need to make painful changes to get more federal help.

I think it is appropriate for us to say, 'are there ways for us to provide help to the U.S. auto industry to get through this very difficult time?' " he said during an online question-and-answer session. "But the price is you've got to finally restructure to deal with these long-standing problems.

"That means that everybody's going to have to give a little bit -- shareholders, workers, creditors, suppliers, dealers -- everybody is going to have to recognize that the current model, economic model of the U.S. auto industry is unsustainable."


His task force is expected to unveil a framework Monday that sets new terms for General Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC to get more federal help beyond the $17.4 billion in loans they already have.


While noting the credit crisis and a sales slump that may reach new lows in March, Obama also revived criticisms of the industry he made in a 2007 speech to the Detroit Economic Club. He chastised the car companies for mismanagement, and said they could not rely on gas-guzzling SUVs as their sole source of profits.


"If they're not willing to make the changes," he said, "then I'm not willing to have taxpayer money chase after bad money."

Meanwhile, GM and Chrysler are preparing updates to their turnaround plans in the face of ever-worsening U.S. sales.

On Thursday, two forecasters pegged March's auto sales at annual rates below 10 million vehicles, the worst-case scenarios envisioned by the automakers.

Lowering their sales and production forecasts would raise the chances of even-deeper cuts, following GM's announcement Thursday that about 7,500 UAW workers agreed to buyouts and early retirements.

Here's a look at where their turnaround plans stand:

Workers
Chrysler, GM

• The UAW tentatively has agreed to end the so-called jobs bank, which pays laid-off workers most of their regular pay. The union also has made other unannounced concessions. Talks continue on replacing some cash payments the companies were to make for what the union's retiree health care trust is owed with company stock....More
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Thursday, March 26, 2009

Auto Task Force Set to Back More Loans -- With Strings


The latest report on the Auto Task Force from the Wall Street Journal

By NEIL KING JR. and JOHN D. STOLL
President Barack Obama last month handed his auto-industry team a seemingly impossible task: to engineer the most complicated industrial restructuring ever attempted by the federal government, and to do it fast.

With almost no experience in the car business, the team's dozen core members have undergone a crash course in the myriad woes plaguing the U.S. auto industry. Within days, just over a month after setting to work, they'll begin announcing decisions.

Interviews with task-force members indicate that the administration doesn't want to let General Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC slip into bankruptcy protection, a course advocated by some critics of the industry. Instead, the task force is expected to say that it sees viable futures for both GM and Chrysler, but only if there are sacrifices from their managements, unions and GM's bondholders. The team will also lay out a firm timeline for action.

The government is prepared to lend the companies more money. The two companies have requested $22 billion more -- including $9 billion for the second quarter. But the task force may not disburse new aid immediately, choosing instead to preserve that as leverage.

Hanging in the balance are the jobs of 140,000 GM and Chrysler employees, more than 10,000 dealerships across the country, and a large swath of the industrial base in the Midwest.

On Wednesday, the task force met with officials from Chrysler and Italy's Fiat SpA and indicated it is still interested in seeing the two companies form an alliance, as the companies have proposed, according to two people who attended the meeting.

It's clear the team is not yet ready to put forward a comprehensive fix. "It's a steep learning curve that they've been climbing, and there is still a lot to do," said Michigan Rep. Gary Peters, whose district in suburban Detroit houses hundreds of auto suppliers, a few days after meeting with the task force. "That's why I suspect they'll come out with some preliminary statements, and then get back to work."

In session after session in a warren of offices at the Treasury Department, the team has sat through tutorials on dealer financing, studied basic data and debated the future of U.S. car sales. They have spent days trying to understand the complexities of the hundreds of companies that supply the car companies with axles, seats and other parts......More
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Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Auto Task Force Bailout plan may be stricter than GM, Chrysler expected


By Sharon Silke Carty, USA TODAY
DETROIT — The Treasury Department will announce this week a preliminary plan to help General Motors and Chrysler that sets goals and deadlines that could be more ambitious than the companies themselves have proposed, according to a Capitol Hill staffer briefed on the plan but who wished to remain anonymous because the proposal is not yet public.
Treasury's preliminary plan also could include a bridge loan to Chrysler that's less than the $5 billion the automaker wants, the staffer said. Treasury says details still are being finalized.

A more structured version of the plan will be detailed in April, when additional loan money could become available to the two troubled companies.

The Bush administration in December set a deadline of March 31 for the automakers to prove they would be viable with the help of emergency government loans. But since then, the car market has hit the skids, and both GM and Chrysler have said they need even more money to survive.

GM and Chrysler are operating on a combined $17.4 billion in government loans approved by the Bush administration. The two automakers have asked the Obama administration for another $21.6 billion and say they need it soon.

The president's auto task force is demanding that the car companies get significant concessions first.

GM bondholders are balking at swapping two-thirds of their GM debt for stakes in the company.

Bondholders warned the government this weekend that if they can't strike a deal with the automaker, the car company might be forced into bankruptcy. A group representing bondholders says many are not willing to take stock in place of bonds because they don't believe GM will be survive long enough to make the shares valuable.

That would result in "dire consequences for the company, the tens of thousands of hard-working Americans that GM employs and the economy as a whole," bondholder advisers from investment firm Houlihan Lokey wrote.

And although the United Auto Workers, which represents U.S. hourly workers, has agreed to concessions, the Canadian Auto Workers union hasn't reached an agreement with Chrysler.

Chrysler says that if it cannot get nearly $16 an hour in wage and benefit concessions from the CAW, as well as a guarantee of $2.3 billion in loans from Canadian governments and a break on a tax dispute with Ottawa, it might have to pull out of Canada, the Associated Press reported Monday.

Canada's the source of Chrysler's U.S.-market minivans and line of big sedans that includes the Chrysler 300 and Dodge Charger.

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Saturday, March 21, 2009

US Auto Task Force Digs In For Long-Term Role


Latest on the Auto Task Force!

WASHINGTON -(Dow Jones)- The Obama administration is digging in for a longer period of oversight of the auto industry than previously thought, recent actions indicate, reflecting the complexity of its task as well as the enormous political risks involved.

On Thursday, the Treasury Department sent auto-parts suppliers a $5 billion lifeline in a move the administration characterized as the "first piece" of its plans for the industry.

And though the department's auto task force has said to possibly expect an announcement next week on bailout requests by General Motors Corp. (GM) and Chrysler LLC, it has cautioned that any such announcement wouldn't be its final word on the sector.

Adding to the sense of a long-term engagement by the government, the Treasury's chief auto adviser said Friday those companies may need " considerably" more aid beyond their current requests of up to a combined $21.6 billion in new loans.

"It could be considerably higher, I won't deny that," the adviser, Steven Rattner, said on Bloomberg Television in an interview that was scheduled to air Friday.

Industry observers have been anticipating March 31 as a sort of D-Day for the industry, with the government releasing its findings on GM and Chrysler, including whether the companies should receive more aid or be pushed into bankruptcy court.

But a task force member, briefing reporters on condition of anonymity this week because he wasn't authorized to speak on the record, attempted to tamp down the expectation of a wholesale, one-shot bailout, instead suggesting a longer, more drawn-out process.

The adviser said the task force would continue to meet with stakeholders of GM and Chrysler - including bondholders, dealers, union leaders and company executives - and closely monitor the industry, with more action as circumstances dictate. Such an approach could differ from the government's last intervention in the sector - the 1979-80 bailout of Chrysler Corp. - and massive bank bailouts during the current economic crisis.

"I think the approach reflects the inherent complexity of this industry that's been built up over the last century," GM spokesman Greg Martin said, referring in part to an intertwined supplier network that serves both healthy and ailing auto makers as well as the dynamic between the union and companies dating back decades.

Rep. Candice Miller, R-Mich., said the task force appears to grasp the nuances of the industry's problems, an understanding that she said was missing in debates in Congress late last year.

The task force's deliberative approach fits into that understanding, she said.

"I don't think we should just be absolutely tied to a March 31 deadline, and I mentioned that" to task force members, said Miller, who along with other U.S. lawmakers met with the task force this week. "I'm not one that advocates we have to have everything determined by March 31. I'm glad that [they're] being very deliberative."

But the task force's approach also reflects the sensitivity to many interests needed to restructure the companies - a political balancing act that requires appeasing powerful groups, including the United Auto Workers, debt holders, dealers and the companies themselves.

Sage Eastman, an aide to Rep. Dave Camp, R-Mich., questioned whether the lengthy time involved in restructuring the industry is owing more to practical difficulties, "or is it that the solutions are politically difficult? .. Did the politics complicate the solutions.

"You could probably get a bunch of experts and economists around the table and say, 'Here's what it's going to look like,'" Eastman added. But taking many of those steps would be politically difficult.

Such difficulties were on display this week when the UAW's chief lobbyist sent a letter to U.S. lawmakers accusing bondholders and other lenders to GM and Chrysler of stalling a debt-swap deal needed to win more federal aid.

In the interview with Bloomberg TV, Rattner said bondholders needed to become more "constructive" in debt negotiations.

GM bondholders, Rattner said, "are looking to the government to help them solve their problem. The government cannot solve everybody's problems, and we need for the bondholders to become part of this in a constructive way."

GM has said it expects to reach deals with the bondholders and the UAW before March 31. Chrysler also has said it expects to have its final restructuring plan in place by then. The Treasury has the option to extend that deadline by one month under the terms of loans GM and Chrysler already have received.

In his interview, Rattner said he may impose a deadline on GM bondholders and the UAW to come up with deals on concessions. "Part of why there's a lack of appearance of movement is nobody wants to go first," he said.

-By Josh Mitchell, Dow Jones Newswires; 202-862-6637; joshua.mitchell@ dowjones.com
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Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Chrysler CEO encouraged by task force progress


Chrysler LLC Chief Executive Bob Nardelli said Tuesday that he's encouraged by the focus of President Barack Obama's auto industry task force on job preservation, but he added that all options for Chrysler are still being considered.

Nardelli said during an appearance on cable network CNBC that the task force hasn't told him that a bankruptcy protection filing at Chrysler is out of the question.

"No they haven't said that," Nardelli said. "What they have said is that they're very intent on preserving, you know, 40,000 or 50,000 direct jobs."

Nardelli said it's crucial that Chrysler get some kind of an indication by March 31 as to if its request for $5 billion in federal aid will be granted, adding that the denial of the aid would be "devastating" for the automaker.

Steven Rattner, a top adviser to the task force, said in an interview with The Associated Press on Monday that the task force was trying to successfully restructure the auto makers during a difficult economic downturn....More
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Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Obama's Auto Task Force open to auto aid


WASHINGTON—President Barack Obama’s auto task force is “open minded” about giving car companies additional aid and will use “all the resources” of the federal government to achieve agreements that avoid bankruptcy, said Steven Rattner, the US Treasury’s chief auto adviser.

US auto suppliers may get some aid, and the task force plans to meet a March 31 deadline for assessing General Motors Corp. and Chrysler Llc. viability, Rattner said in an interview. “We are open-minded about committing additional resources to ensuring a viable domestic car industry,” he said.

“We will bring all the resources of the government to bear on these various stakeholders and try to reach a fair compromise, a set of compromises,” Rattner said. He added, “Bankruptcy is not our goal nor a desirable outcome. Our goal is to end up with viable car companies.”

GM and Chrysler, surviving on $17.4 billion in US aid, have requested as much as $21.6 billion in additional government loans. Obama’s auto task force is assessing the automaker proposals as it recommends whether to supply additional aid or tip the car companies into bankruptcy.

“We’re not going to simply hand out dollar bills on Pennsylvania Avenue,” he said, adding that stakeholders might sense “the government will end up solving all problems, and it’s just not going to happen here.”

On Monday GM’s chief executive Richard Wagoner met with the task force in Washington, a person familiar with the matter said.

Wagoner also planned a session with German Economy Minister Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg later that day, according to a statement released by the German Embassy. The meeting will be about GM and its European subsidiaries, including Opel, Ulrich Sante, a German Embassy spokesman, said in an interview.

Wagoner is being joined at the meetings by chief operating officer Fritz Henderson, according to the person, who requested anonymity because the sessions are private. The task force gathering was to discuss GM’s efforts to reduce costs and restore profit, said the person, who declined to be more specific.

Information was exchanged in the meeting, and no decisions were made, the person said.

Austan Goolsbee, an Obama task force member who was asked about the GM session on Bloomberg Television, said he wouldn’t talk about details of what happens in auto meetings.

“The President’s been totally clear that he’s committed to supporting American industry,” Goolsbee, a member of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, said in the interview. “Anybody who wants money from the US government, it’s got to be a bridge to somewhere, not a bridge to nowhere.”

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and National Economic Council director Lawrence Summers lead the task force, which will help decide to supply more aid or tip the automaker into bankruptcy. (Bloomberg)...More
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Monday, March 16, 2009

Auto Task Force: Not Looking to Bankruptcy


President Barack Obama's automotive task force is focused on solving the industry's problems outside of bankruptcy and will likely continue to provide funding long after a pending March 31 deadline, the group's lead adviser told the Detroit Free Press.

Bankruptcy is not our goal," Steven Rattner said in a the newspaper inteview published Monday. "I've been in and around bankruptcy for 26 years as part of my private-sector work. It is never a good outcome for any company, and it's never a first choice."

Rattner also said the panel was committed to meeting the March 31 deadlines specified in loan deals with General Motors(GM Quote - Cramer on GM - Stock Picks) and Chrysler, but decisions on further aid could come later.

"It's entirely possible, in fact I think it's more than likely, that what you will see is not a single announcement at a point in time that's the beginning of the end of our policy efforts for the auto industry, but rather a series of actions over perhaps a reasonably long period of time to solve this problem," he said.

Additionally, Rattner said the task force is seeking ways to help auto- company suppliers survive....More
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Thursday, March 12, 2009

Obama Auto Task Force invites Toyota for some Talks


Great The Auto Task Force Is Meeting With The Foreign Auto Powerhouse Toyota! Lookout Tax Payers...Send more tax dollars overseas!

Jim Lentz, President of Toyota Motor Sales in the US, will be meeting with the task force at the White House, reports MSNBC.

Both parties say that the meeting is to “talk” and “exchange views.” Whatever the reason, we find it more than appropriate. There is nothing wrong with meeting with the competition, so to speak, to find out more about the industry and help shape ideas that can make our domestic automakers more competitive.

Moreover, the panel is reaching out to all segments of the auto industry. They have been meeting with automakers, dealers, politicians and other auto industry leaders. We say kudos to that!
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Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Auto Task Force Met With Fiat SpA Chief Executive about Chrysler Deal


Reported from Bloomberg.Com

Bloomberg-- U.S. Treasury advisers Ron Bloom and Steven Rattner spent most of a 2.5 hour meeting with Fiat SpA Chief Executive Officer Sergio Marchionne talking about his plan to take a 35 percent stake in Chrysler, a person briefed on the meeting said.

Members of Barack Obama’s auto task force are meeting with automakers, suppliers, debtholders, labor leaders and other stakeholders to determine whether they should give additional aid from the Troubled Asset Relief Program to help the industry. GM, Chrysler and their finance companies have already been granted $24.9 billion in TARP loans and are seeking as much as $21.6 billion more.

To contact the reporter on this story: Jeff Green in Detroit at jgreen16@bloomberg.net

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Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Auto Task Force In Detroit


Article About the Auto Task Force

Obama's auto task force scrutinizes GM, Chrysler operations
by Rick Haglund | Detroit Bureau

DETROIT -- Top members of President Barack Obama's automotive task force scrutinized operations of General Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC as a March 31 deadline looms for the two automakers to prove viability.

At least four task force members were in Detroit on Monday, meeting privately with the automakers' executives and leaders of the United Auto Workers union.

"They're taking a deeper look at the auto companies and doing a lot of due diligence," said Stephanie Brinley, an auto analyst in the Southfield office of consultant AutoPacific. "The attempt is there. That's certainly a step in the right direction."

GM and Chrysler are being kept alive by $17.4 billion in federal loans. GM is asking for as much as $16.6 billion more, including $2 billion by March 31. Chrysler says it needs $5 billion by March 31 to stay in business.

The task force's visit was led by Steven Rattner, Obama's chief auto adviser, and Ron Bloom, a former investment banker who has served as an adviser to the United Steelworkers union.

They visited GM's technical center and a Chrysler truck plant in Warren. Task force members also drove several advanced propulsion vehicles, including the Chevrolet Volt electric extended-range car.

No details were released about any of the meetings with automaker executives.

"We believe today's visit provided a constructive glimpse of GM people, their passion for their work and the technology solutions that are behind the pages of our viability plan," GM said in a statement.

The visit comes as Republicans in Congress are ratcheting up opposition to more financial support for the ailing automakers.....More


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Monday, March 9, 2009

Auto task force to see industry close-up

WASHINGTON -- The top advisers for President Barack Obama's auto task force will have a chance today to literally kick the tires on Detroit's struggling automakers before deciding how much federal aid they're worth.

The visit, spurred by invitations from the automakers, will cap two weeks of intensive research by the presidential task force into all aspects of the U.S. auto industry as it suffers the worst slump in four decades. After today's trip, the Obama administration has only days to address warnings from General Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC of imminent bankruptcy and collapse without at least $7 billion in aid by the end of the month -- $5 billion for Chrysler and $2 billion for GM....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.

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