Showing posts with label obama. Show all posts
Showing posts with label obama. Show all posts

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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Monday, March 30, 2009

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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Obama forces Wagoner out at GM


Chrysler gets 30 days to complete Fiat deal, GM 60 days to restructure

Christine Tierney and David Shepardson / The Detroit News

In a dramatic development on the day before President Barack Obama was to unveil his plan for the auto industry, General Motors Corp. Chairman and CEO Rick Wagoner stepped down after the administration asked him to resign.

Obama has said he wants to help the U.S. auto industry and is offering GM and Chrysler LLC fresh short-term aid, but he faces mounting public opposition to industry bailouts.

"From the government's perspective, they had to show a visible form of sacrifice," said David Cole, chairman of the Center for Automotive Research in Ann Arbor and the son of a former GM president. "At one level I'm surprised, and at another level, not at all."

GM confirmed the management change just after midnight and Wagoner released a statement."Fritz Henderson is an excellent choice to be the next CEO of GM," Wagoner said. "Having worked closely with Fritz for many years, I know that he is the ideal person to lead the company through the completion of our restructuring efforts."

Henderson, 50, a GM veteran who has led the automaker's European and Chinese operations, has been carrying out the company's restructuring on a day-to-day basis and knows the leaders of Obama's auto task force.

GM also said that Kent Kresa, chairman emeritus of Northrop Grumman Corp., had been named interim non-executive chairman of the board of directors. Kresa became a GM director in 2003.

Wagoner, 56, was a GM lifer who became the company's CEO in 2000 and chairman in 2003.

Industry experts credit Wagoner with pushing through reforms and a landmark labor contract at the 100-year-old automaker, but he may have moved too slowly.

"If you can criticize Rick, it's that he was incremental by nature," said Jeremy Anwyl, chief executive officer for the automotive research site Edmunds.com. "Step by step they were moving forward but they ran out of time."

After losing $82 billion since 2004, GM is subsisting on federal loans as it struggles through one of the most perilous stretches in its history. It has received $13.4 billion from the government and sought up to $16.6 billion more.

The government said late Sunday it will provide GM with an unspecified amount of working capital over the next 60 days.

There will be no immediate management changes at Chrysler, which will receive aid for 30 days as it moves to conclude an alliance with Italy's Fiat SpA.

Obama is scheduled to publicly outline his strategy for the American auto industry today in Washington.

In his statement, Wagoner said he was asked to step down during a meeting Friday at the U.S. Treasury Department.

"I think the need for something symbolic was pretty strong, and this certainly qualifies," Anwyl said.

In its assessment of GM's restructuring plan submitted on Feb. 17, the task force concluded that the plan was not viable, that GM needed a change of leadership, including changing most of the directors on its board.

It also said GM's plans did not go far enough, and it still has too many nameplates. It also said that while the Chevrolet Volt extended-range electric vehicle looks promising, it will probably be too expensive to be commercially successful initially.

Wagoner, who had agreed to work for $1 a year, is barred from getting a golden parachute or a big severance package under the terms of the government's Troubled Asset Recovery Program.

Earlier on Sunday, on one of the morning news shows, Obama said he believed the U.S. auto sector could be restructured to become a successful industry.

"But it's got to be one that's realistically designed to weather this storm and to emerge at the other end much more lean and mean and competitive than it currently is," he said on CBS's "Face the Nation." "And that's going to mean a set of sacrifices from all parties -- management, labor, shareholders, creditors, suppliers, dealers." ...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 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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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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Saturday, February 21, 2009

Will Obama's Auto Task Force Merge GM and Chrysler?

More talks of the GM and Chrysler Merger. When Chrysler submitted it's viability plan on Tue. 2/17/09 they suggested the best thing for Chrysler was to merge with GM.

GM and Chrysler have talked of working together for years and in November 07 the talks of full blown merger heated up.

Well they are at it again, now the question is "Will the Auto Task Force merge the two companies"?

If this goes down you will know it was all contrived months ago!!!
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Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Bailout-Obama suggested more help for auto industry


WASHINGTON (Map, News) - President-elect Obama suggested to President Bush that the administration immediately provide extra help to struggling U.S. automakers, aides to the Democrat say, in their first face-to-face meeting since Election Day.

Obama's aides said the president-elect brought up the issue with Bush during their two-hour White House talks on Monday, expressing his view that action is needed now, not just to help the U.S. companies but also the broader economy, because of their enormous reach. Obama raised the idea of an administration point person on autos with a portfolio aimed at improving the long-term health of the companies.

Bush repeated his position, recently stated by staff, that he is open to helping the automakers.

Also, amid discussions over whether new economic stimulus spending is needed, Obama focused on his desire for it while Bush stressed that his main priority for any postelection action out of Congress is approval of a long-stalled free trade agreement with Colombia, said people familiar with the conversation between the two men. The sources declined to be named publicly because of the private nature of the talks....more

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Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Polls:Obama Leads McCain


Don't Forget to Get Out and Vote!

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Democrat Barack Obama leads Republican John McCain in six of eight key battleground states one day before the U.S. election, including the big prizes of Florida and Ohio, according to a series of Reuters/Zogby polls released on Monday.

Obama holds a 7-point edge over McCain among likely U.S. voters in a separate Reuters/C-SPAN/Zogby national tracking poll, up 1 percentage point from Sunday. The telephone poll has a margin of error of 2.9 percentage points.

Obama heads into Tuesday's voting in a comfortable position, with McCain struggling to overtake Obama's lead in every national opinion poll and to hold off his challenge in about a dozen states won by President George W. Bush in 2004.

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Friday, October 31, 2008

Obama: I'll meet with Detroit automakers immediately!


Gordon Trowbridge / Detroit News Washington Bureau

Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama said Thursday he would immediately meet with the heads of Detroit's automakers and union once he takes office, telling NBC News, "We do need American cars."

Obama's comments came in an interview with anchor Brian Williams to air later Thursday on NBC's "Nightly News."

"My hope is if I'm elected, that I'm immediately meeting with heads of the Big Three automakers, as well with the United Auto Workers," Obama told Williams. "And to sit down and craft a strategy that puts us on a path for an auto industry that can compete with anybody in the world." ....More



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