Ford Bailout Money Unnecessary, Company Says

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KIMBERLY S. JOHNSON and TOM KRISHER | December 10, 2008 11:54 AM EST | AP

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DEARBORN, Mich. — By shunning government loans, Ford Motor Co.'s top executives say they hope to buff up the automaker's image and set it apart from its cash-starved Detroit competitors, General Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC.

GM and Chrysler are in desperate need of government money and may not last until the end of the year without it. But Ford set up $23.5 billion worth of credit in 2006, and both Chief Executive Alan Mulally and Executive Chairman Bill Ford Jr. told The Associated Press on Tuesday they are confident that the borrowing, coupled with restructuring and new product plans, will get them through the recession without relying on the government.

Ford even said the century-old company that bears his family's name might be able to use the independence from loans to its advantage.

"I think if they see Ford as a company trying to pull itself up by its own bootstraps, and making it on its own and pulling the right levers, I think that could be a positive for us," Ford said.

Mulally said Ford has completed much of the restructuring that Congress is demanding of the other two, slimming down its brands by selling Jaguar, Land Rover and Aston Martin and studying the sale of Sweden's Volvo.

Ford, he said, has cut its factory capacity to match demand, and it anticipates no further cuts will be necessary as long as the U.S. auto market doesn't worsen considerably. The company has announced the closure of 17 factories and eliminated 50,000 jobs since 2005, many through buyout and early retirement offers.

The interviews came as weary Democratic congressional leaders cleared the final obstacles to a $15 billion bailout of Chrysler and GM. Congressional officials said Wednesday that majority Democrats and the Bush White House finalized a deal that could go to a vote later that day, although stiff opposition lingered among some Republican lawmakers.

Among the requirements in the Democrats' proposed legislation is the appointment of a "car czar" to oversee Chrysler and GM with authority to yank the loans if the companies don't make substantial progress toward restructuring.

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Both companies are likely to seek further concessions from the United Auto Workers and their creditors in order to justify the government money and prove themselves viable.

But Mulally said Tuesday he would expect the same concessions from the union even though Ford wouldn't be under government supervision.

"The UAW supports the entire industry. They represent employees at all three companies. I can't imagine being disadvantaged on that," Mulally said. "I would think whatever's done on that we would continue to do together because they support all of us."

Mulally appeared before Congress last week with the CEOs of GM and Chrysler, and said he did so to support the other automakers and to line up a government loan just in case the economy worsened and Ford might needed the money in the future. If one or both of the others go into bankruptcy, it could drag down parts suppliers and force Ford into the same situation, Mulally said.

Mike Moran, Ford's Washington, D.C., spokesman, said Wednesday that drafts of the bailout legislation show Ford would not fall under government supervision unless it actually draws on a federal loan.

Ford wants to set up a $9 billion long-term line of credit from the government but would use it only if the U.S. auto market worsens or fails to recover. The company has said it has enough borrowed money to make it through 2009 without government help.

"From our understanding of the drafts that have been shared publicly, a company that is actually borrowing the money would have to comply under the structure and oversight, but Ford has clearly indicated we aren't going to be requesting any short-term bridge loans from the government," Moran said.

He said Ford would comply with all government conditions if it tapped the loans at a later date.

Mulally said that if Congress required him to step down for Ford to get the money, he would comply with the conditions.

But Ford, the executive chairman, said he would be against Mulally leaving, joking that he might rob a bank to keep the executive he hired away from aviation giant Boeing Co. in 2006.

Mulally said that two years ago Ford took its plan _ similar to the one it submitted to Congress last week _ to 40 banks in an effort to get financing to unify its production system and for research and development. It originally estimated a need for $17 billion, but raised additional funds just in case.

"None of us thought it would go as deep as it was going to go and we would have to use it all," Mulally said. "To finance this transformation of Ford on the production system to match demand and get back to profitability, and finance our accelerated product development. That's what led to doing it and doing it at that time."

Ford said the company is trying to take leadership in fuel economy with direct-injection turbocharged engines, new hybrid gas-electric powertrains and eventually electric vehicles. Competitors, including Chrysler, GM, Toyota Motor Corp. and Honda Motor Co., have or are working on, similar technologies.

"Even when we got into tough times, we kept our R&D spending alive, and it was something that I was personally involved in to make sure we spent in the new technologies that will get us to real modernization," he said.

He said it looks like the country is moving toward electric vehicles as the next generation of transportation, and he called on the government to come up with an energy policy to pick one technology and start building the infrastructure to make it work.

"I don't think we'll ever get the infrastructure built that we need if market forces alone are working. I think that our government has to provide some direction," he said.

Ford also said he'd like to see the government keep gas prices stable with taxes or a floor on crude oil prices so automakers can plan their models better.

Gasoline prices peaked at more than $4 per gallon during the summer but now are well below $2 per gallon in many areas of the country.

"We plan our vehicles three, four, five years in advance," he said. "It makes life very difficult if the market gyrates wildly over the course of several months, and that's exactly what we've seen happen."

DEARBORN, Mich. — By shunning government loans, Ford Motor Co.'s top executives say they hope to buff up the automaker's image and set it apart from its cash-starved Detroit competitors, General...
DEARBORN, Mich. — By shunning government loans, Ford Motor Co.'s top executives say they hope to buff up the automaker's image and set it apart from its cash-starved Detroit competitors, General...
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- teasley I'm a Fan of teasley 5 fans permalink

Kencarydem: Perhaps they don't wish to take orders from some nickel dime "CAR CZAR" beurocrat that knows nothing about the auto business.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:14 AM on 12/10/2008
- joannenj I'm a Fan of joannenj 9 fans permalink

They can't run the government but think they can run the car industry. Well based on the economy that should be a great success.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:26 AM on 12/10/2008

Because the management team of the "big" 3 has shown a lot of competency and good strategic decisions in the past 5 years : Hummer, F-350, Escalade, HEMI, V12 Triton ... I think Ford, GM and Chrysler already have their own bureaucrats that don't understand anything about the car market and its future

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:28 AM on 12/10/2008

Im sure that had "ABSOLUTELY NOTHING" to do with fat cat oil lobbyists :::::rolls eyes::::

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:48 PM on 12/10/2008
- Viper I'm a Fan of Viper 255 fans permalink

You are aware that every country we compete with has an Industrial policy... an Industry Czar.

Regards

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:57 AM on 12/10/2008
- Rebecca I'm a Fan of Rebecca 37 fans permalink
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Then My next car will be a Ford.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:14 AM on 12/10/2008

ALL of my (and my husbands) cars have been Ford. We own stock in Ford. So happy to read this article - in my book, they have always been the real American car company.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:35 AM on 12/10/2008
- Pdubya I'm a Fan of Pdubya 44 fans permalink

Good on you Ford! Henry would be proud.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:13 AM on 12/10/2008

You know, there's really nothing wrong with trying to line up all of your ducks in order, and then re-order them. There are a multitude of reasons they would want to avoid the government intervention, and there are a multitude of reasons they would want to have that additional line of credit available to them. LEt 'em choose.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:12 AM on 12/10/2008

Yes, but since this Congress and white House were passing out money to anyone and everyone why wouldn't they make a run at it.

Banks not in trouble took money because it was a loan you couldn't refuse and will make them stronger in the end.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:26 AM on 12/10/2008
- NoToGOP08 I'm a Fan of NoToGOP08 8 fans permalink

What happened? Did they sell out to the Chinese like Lenovo?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:12 AM on 12/10/2008

Lenovo is Chinese. So you mean, did they "sell out like IBM".

Hardly. Lenovo was already making the IBM notebooks for years at the very highest quality level. The Thinkpad is what it is because of Lenovo. Quality has not suffered since the transfer of the brand name from IBM, instead Lenovo continues to build the best professional notebook in the market.

Your fear of and loathing for the Chinese is irrational. Unless you are genuinely afraid of people who do good work... in that case you should be screaming of the top of your lungs because the Chinese are going to eat your lunch.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:10 PM on 12/10/2008
- onenvrnos I'm a Fan of onenvrnos 29 fans permalink
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I am thrilled that Ford has decided to steer its own course by having already borrowed the money needed for R & D.before this current meltdown. I honestly believe that Ford should be the only one to "make it", so that all the efforts are focused upon building the best possible vehicle. In other words, they all need to work from the same building block. I agree that the government needs to steer the course by building the necessary infrastructure for electric and battery operated cars.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:10 AM on 12/10/2008
- teasley I'm a Fan of teasley 5 fans permalink

I currently drive a GM car. My wife a Chrysler product. I may need to consider a Ford next time around.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:07 AM on 12/10/2008
- SimJack I'm a Fan of SimJack 65 fans permalink
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No bailout for Chrysler, let Cerberus Capital, Chrysler's owners and master pump their own money in. America doesn't need the K-car hybrid. Why did CEO of Ford waste everyone's time? Well, if Congress is handing out money, why not get in line, don't want to miss that gravy train. GM, no soup for you either. In business you are either an innovator, an imitator or an idiot.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:06 AM on 12/10/2008

You just made a new fan, SimJack! EB

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:14 PM on 12/10/2008
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Ok, so Ford can survive, but by closing plants and eliminating jobs. Great, you go Ford. Those American workers that now work for sub-living wage jobs applaud you and are waiting for a car they can afford.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:05 AM on 12/10/2008

What planet do you live on?

Should they open more plants and pay people to do nothing? If there is no demand for the product then you need less workers.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:28 AM on 12/10/2008
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My point is that with less living wage production jobs there are less people that can pay for consumer goods to keep a consumer based economy growing. The economy of this country needs balance; goods and services produced by people given an adequate wage with which to purchase said goods and services. By stagnating, or shrinking, people's buying power the economy must, in turn, stagnate or shrink.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:47 PM on 12/10/2008
- Chicago48 I'm a Fan of Chicago48 10 fans permalink

What about the Jobs Bank? Will they re-negotiate with the union about the Jobs Bank?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:41 AM on 12/10/2008

THERE ARE NO MORE JOB BANKS DID AWAY WITH IT IN 2008 CONTRACT.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:30 AM on 12/11/2008
- munki I'm a Fan of munki 34 fans permalink
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What are their QUALIFICATIONS to be CEO/Executives?

Please... I am stuck with mechanical problems..­. Ford Ranger!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:03 AM on 12/10/2008
- AZBunny I'm a Fan of AZBunny 4 fans permalink

We have a 94 Ford Ranger that still runs great. I wouldn't drive anything but a Ford. What to see my Mustang? She's a beauty.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:42 AM on 12/10/2008
- munki I'm a Fan of munki 34 fans permalink
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Mine is 2003... 1990's they made better cars!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:57 PM on 12/10/2008
- horsey I'm a Fan of horsey 13 fans permalink
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Well if Ford could pull itself up by it's own bootstraps what the hell were they doing begging for billions of taxpayer bucks a week ago.

Were they hoping for no oversight and looking to to take a free mean from the taxpayer in the first place? I mean what were they even doing at the table if they didn't need it?

that makes them look even worse.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:03 AM on 12/10/2008
- findmind I'm a Fan of findmind 7 fans permalink
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Ford asked for a line of credit, and said they may not need to touch it...unles­s the economy gets worse or in the event that GM or Chrysler goes down...the­y use a lot of the same suppliers, some of them would go bankrupt too...and it would cause problems for Ford getting parts to build their cars and trucks.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:13 AM on 12/10/2008

They were asking for loan guarantees, not cash. The others wanted the money.

I have a Ford F250, but would never buy another. THAT is the problem.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:14 AM on 12/10/2008
- max I'm a Fan of max 11 fans permalink

if they didn't need it why were they there in the first place? welfare for the rich

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:59 AM on 12/10/2008

Read the article. Then read it again.

GM, Chrysler, and Ford DO NOT MAKE PARTS IN-HOUSE. They obtain them from independent suppliers who manufacture parts to their specifications.

if GM and Chrysler collapse, their parts suppliers collapse with them.

Ford relies on many of the same parts suppliers that would be brought down by a GM or Chrysler collapse.

Such a collapse would mean Ford would have to invest heavily in new parts suppliers. While Ford does not need immediate infusions of cash, it was seeking guarantees from Congress that it could obtain the money if later if necessary.

Capisce?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:11 PM on 12/10/2008
- Tom95134 I'm a Fan of Tom95134 53 fans permalink
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All you people wringing your hands about how to bail out the Big 3 need to read this....
"The Inspired Auto Bailout Of Tom Friedman's Dreams"
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/12/10/the-auto-bailout-tom-frie_n_149868.html

Especially when the last line in the HuffPost article says, "The electric cars will be built by Renault-Nissan. "

The NY Times Op-Ed piece is here... http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/10/opinion/10friedman.html

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:56 AM on 12/10/2008
- drjay79 I'm a Fan of drjay79 3 fans permalink

So they went to Washington twice to testify before congress, what a waste of time and money. Isn't that the whole problem? The Ford CEO should have stayed home and WORKED!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:50 AM on 12/10/2008

Seems like GM is the only on that should really get a bailout, considering that Chrysler is a privately owned company. If they need funds, they need to go public then and rise the money like other companies.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:46 AM on 12/10/2008
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