GM Bankruptcy Almost Inevitable, Experts Say

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TOM KRISHER | May 10, 2009 09:26 PM EST | AP

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FILE - This Tuesday, April 21, 2009 file photo shows the General Motors world headquarters in Detroit. General Motors Corp. said Thursday May 7, 2009 it lost $6 billion in the first quarter and spent $10.2 billion more cash than it took in, as a sales slump cut revenue by $20 billion. The nation's biggest domestic automaker lost $9.78 per share, compared with a loss of $3.3 billion, or $5.80 per share, in the year-ago period. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya, File)

DETROIT — For General Motors Corp., the task at hand is so difficult that experts say a Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing is all but inevitable.

To remake itself outside of court, GM must persuade bondholders to swap $27 billion in debt for 10 percent of its risky stock. On top of that, the automaker must work out deals with its union, announce factory closures, cut or sell brands and force hundreds of dealers out of business _ all in three weeks.

"I just don't see how it's possible, given all of the pieces," said Stephen J. Lubben, a professor at Seton Hall University School of Law who specializes in bankruptcy.

GM, which has received $15.4 billion in federal aid, faces a June 1 government deadline to complete its restructuring plan. If it can't finish in time, the company will follow Detroit competitor Chrysler LLC into bankruptcy protection.

Although company executives said last week they would still prefer to restructure out of court, experts say all GM is doing now is lining up majorities of stakeholders to make its court-supervised reorganization move more quickly.

"If we need to pursue bankruptcy, we will make sure that we do it in an expeditious fashion. The exact strategies I'm not getting into today, but we'll be ready to go if that's required," Chief Executive Fritz Henderson said last week.

The threat of bankruptcy, however, may be just a negotiating ploy to pull reluctant bondholders into the equity swap deal. In Chrysler's case, some secured debtholders resisted taking roughly 30 cents on the dollar for what they were owed, but most gave in after they were identified in court documents.

Henderson, who took over in March when the government ousted Rick Wagoner, said last week there's still time to get everything done by the deadline, although he conceded it will be difficult to meet a government requirement that 90 percent of its thousands of bondholders agree to the stock swap.

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The biggest obstacle to GM restructuring out of court appears to be its bondholders, who have been reluctant to sign on to the stock swap when the government and United Auto Workers union would get far more stock in exchange for debts owed by GM.

GM has proposed issuing 62 billion new shares, 100 times more than the 611 million now offered publicly.

Even though the U.S. government has agreed to back up GM and Chrysler new-car warranties, potential car buyers already view GM as if it's in bankruptcy, reflected by the company's steep revenue drop in the latest quarter, Lubben said. On Thursday, GM posted a $6 billion first-quarter loss and said its revenue dropped plunged by nearly half, largely because bankruptcy fears scared customers away from showrooms.

"I don't think anyone is buying cars from a company who is wringing their hands about a potential bankruptcy for the past year or so," he said.

Under Chapter 11, a company can stay in operation under court protection while sheds debts and unprofitable assets to emerge in a stronger financial position.

At this point, GM needs to resolve the uncertainty and get in and out of bankruptcy as quickly as possible, Lubben said.

The company is talking with the UAW and Canadian auto workers unions about concessions, including getting the UAW to take roughly 39 percent of its stock in exchange for half of the $20 billion GM must pay into a union-run trust that will take over retiree health care payments next year.

About 50 percent of the stock would go to the government for its loans. GM said last week it would need another $2.6 billion in May and $9 billion more for the rest of the year, bringing the total to $27 billion.

One percent would go to current shareholders, with bondholders getting the other 10 percent.

Bondholders are reluctant to take the deal because the government and UAW are getting far bigger stakes in the company, said Kevin Tynan, an industry analyst for Argus Research in New York.

"When you look across at what the union is getting and what the government is getting, to expect them to take 10 percent is just unrealistic," he said.

Cutting dealers also remains a huge hurdle, with GM hoping to shed 2,600 of its 6,246 dealerships by 2010.

But dealers are protected by state franchise laws, and trying to shed them outside of bankruptcy would result in either millions of dollars in payments or multiple lengthy lawsuits, Lubben said.

"That means you've got to negotiate with each one of those dealers individually."

Also, GM on Friday told its major parts suppliers that it would move up payments due on June 2 to May 28.

Company spokesman Dan Flores said it was being done to help the suppliers at a critical time, but he denied that the payments were pulled ahead of a potential June 1 bankruptcy filing.

GM has begun to temporarily close 13 assembly plants for up to 11 weeks through mid-July in an effort to control inventory. With Chrysler plants also shut down during its bankruptcy proceedings, parts suppliers will soon have no income and could go under.

It would help speed up GM's stay in bankruptcy court if it could pull together big blocks of stakeholders to agree on reducing debt or changing other stakes, said Robert Gordon, head of the corporate restructuring and bankruptcy group at the Clark Hill PLC law firm in Detroit.

During its quest for government aid, GM executives said bankruptcy would severely cut their sales, with research showing that people would shy away from GM vehicles for fear that warranties would not be backed and parts would not be available.

Tynan said the executives now can't change their story, even though they likely know that bankruptcy is inevitable.

"They're sort of morally obligated to say 'we're intent on doing this outside of bankruptcy,'" he said. "But at the end of the day, they just want the magnitude of the restructuring to get done."

DETROIT — For General Motors Corp., the task at hand is so difficult that experts say a Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing is all but inevitable. To remake itself outside of court, GM must persuade b...
DETROIT — For General Motors Corp., the task at hand is so difficult that experts say a Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing is all but inevitable. To remake itself outside of court, GM must persuade b...
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- goozidi I'm a Fan of goozidi 2 fans permalink
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The problem is that American car manufacturers don't want to accept that QUALITY is the key to their success or failure. Bailout, Bankruptcy, or any other financial avenues would not rescue them. I would like to see that the next car coming out of assembly line has a 15 years bumper to bumper warranty. OK, 10 is the minimum I can accept.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:49 AM on 05/12/2009

Is it just me, or were we warned in doomsday peril mode just a few months ago that if the US Government did not bail out the auto manufacturers, that 5 million jobs would be lost and the economy would be forever lost??

What happened? 1 has gone into bankruptcy, likely with a 2nd to follow, yet the doomsday talk is nowhere to be seen? Were they wrong THEN, or wrong NOW?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:39 AM on 05/12/2009

Couldn't happen to a nicer bunch. These GM managers were the absolute bottom of the barrel. They ran the company into the ground took all the equity out in excecutive pay, then blamed the economy, the unions, bad luck, everyone but themselves. What a pathetic sight. The sooner the car companies die the better.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:18 PM on 05/11/2009
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Wait a minute that was the Wall Street Banks you just described!

$30 to $100 Million Christmas Bonuses on TOP of $10 to $50 Million salaries describes Goldman better than GM!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:46 PM on 05/11/2009
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Wall Street Bankers SKIMMED Hidden FEES part of their banks' profits into their Pockets leaving the Banks unable to withstand a downturn.

Wall Street did far more damage to the Economy compared to the Auto Companies.

The sooner we downsize the SUPER MEGA BANKS to small automated and efficient banks the better! Put Banking back to 10% at most of the economy and restore their support of a manufacturing and service economy on MAIN STREET!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:51 PM on 05/11/2009

While I don't harbor any love for Wall Street, what on earth do the problems on Wall Street have to do with the auto manufacturers? Are you suggesting that if the bankers had not messed up, that all would be well at Chrysler and GM??

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:41 AM on 05/12/2009
- berrycooda I'm a Fan of berrycooda 24 fans permalink

GM is too busy expanding in China.....and moving a lot of their operations elsewhere.

Guess they forget who helped them get this far....
So much for GREED...
Go to another country and barely pay wages to people who usually get
subsidized for rent from their Govt.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:04 PM on 05/11/2009
- markinaz I'm a Fan of markinaz 7 fans permalink

Too bad...so sad. Good riddance. America does not need a company that is so greedy and poorly run, that it can't plan for the future. It will be interesting to see what ultimately happens to Ford.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:23 PM on 05/11/2009
- sc300nc I'm a Fan of sc300nc 56 fans permalink

Bankrupt, but not out of business. Obama owes too much to the unions to let the business fail completely. Look at Chrysler. It's all about political payback. The union will end up owning a significant portion of GM too, taxpayers will take it in the shorts.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:08 AM on 05/11/2009

Amen!!! Wish people would see the writing on the walls!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:21 PM on 05/11/2009

Almost inevitable? I've been predicting GM's bankruptcy as inevitable for two years, during which time GM has been burning through about $2 billion a month. Two years ago, GM had more than $40 billion in cash! Watching GM flush that down the drain at the rate of 2 billion a month, anyone with a brain could have predicted exactly when GM would run out of cash. And sure enough, GM is out of cash and still not making enough of a profit to be profitable. Now the taxpayer is supposed to supply the dough to flush? Fuggedaboutit!

GM is toast. It's over. Sad, perhaps, but true. The company has been woefully mismanaged. Too many opportunities lost. Where are the high-MPG cars? Why did GM sell the best EV battery to the oil companies? The knew the technology would be buried. Ask them why they did that. That battery would have powered the volt just fine. Now it's unavailable. Great move. GM are reaping what they have sown.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:13 AM on 05/11/2009
- pharm I'm a Fan of pharm 4 fans permalink

The battery that cost $30,000, blew up, and only went for 100 miles if you didn`t run the wipers/radio/brake assist/etc.? The Volt battery is less than a third of the price already, and will get less with each generation.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:19 PM on 05/11/2009
- ko2ko2 I'm a Fan of ko2ko2 2 fans permalink
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GM and Chrysler goes down ford wins U.S. market. Govt shouldn't be involved and if they have to be involved don't help the losers support the winner FORD!. We are throwing away way to much money to failed businesses.

Remember if evolution (capitalism) had cheat codes (bailouts) then humans would probably not exists and we would probably be dinosaurs since the govt would have stop the asteroid (economic collapse)...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:33 AM on 05/11/2009

There is no way any US manufacturing will survive the next ten years because our government attacks our manufacturing industry. They Refuse to enforce fair trade laws including under valuing of foreign currencies which gives them an unbeatable cost advantage.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:10 AM on 05/11/2009

We do a great job of ruining the value of the dollar with all the borrowing our government has to do. With Obama now saying we'll borrow 50 cents for ever dollar of government spending over the next two years, the dollar may plummet vs. other currencies. So American exporters should have a real advantage.

That said, American workers must be able to do more than their foreign competitors if they want to get paid more. In the international marketplace, if an Indonesian or Mexican with an 8th grade education can do what you can do - you are in a lot of trouble and you can't expect to make more over the long run. This is why having an improved US education system and Americans who will bust a gut to get educated is critical.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:54 PM on 05/11/2009
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The unions have to come around, too. 7% of all union jobs in every union are sustained to employ people whose jobs are obsolete. There are widget installers on car lines for widgets that don't exist anymore. There are curtain pullers in theaters that have electronic curtain controls. There are valve technicians for dams with electronically controlled valves.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:33 AM on 05/12/2009
- research I'm a Fan of research 282 fans permalink

GM bankruptcy is inevitable because of Investment Insurance that the hedge funds took out.

TARP funds insure the hedge fund bond holders against loss from bankruptcy.

We Paid IAG's Credit default swap insurance claims.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/05/05/creditors-may-have-pushed_n_196964.html?show_comment_id=23976943#comment_23976943

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:56 AM on 05/11/2009
- 700rpm I'm a Fan of 700rpm 6 fans permalink

Using an inflation calculator, a car that cost $1500 in 1955 (which would have been a very nice mid-sized sedan) should only cost about $12,000 today. Yet even cheap American sedans begin at about $16,000. What has happened? Have we really gotten a 30% better automobile for that price increase?

Well, maybe, what with ABS, airbags, seat belts, fuel injection, safer tires, reinforced doors, superior passenger cage designs.

It would be interesting to know exactly what factors now determine the cost of a car and how that compares with real wages 50 years ago and real wages now.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:56 AM on 05/11/2009
- michmudder I'm a Fan of michmudder 3 fans permalink

Comerica Bank publishes it Auto Affordability Index quarterly. A typical vehicle now a takes a U.S. family only 21.5 weeks of median income to buy--a 30 year low.

http://usnews.rankingsandreviews.com/cars-trucks/daily-news/090511-Study-Car-Prices-at-30-Year-Low-Compared-to-Income/

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:40 AM on 05/11/2009
- cdrach I'm a Fan of cdrach 4 fans permalink

about 600000 less people a month have NO "median income" to buy a car-let alone groceries

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:43 AM on 05/12/2009
- OneTop I'm a Fan of OneTop 94 fans permalink
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GM has been bankrupt for years. It's just now getting around to making it official.

If you all knew anything, you would realize that GM split off it's major internal parts supplier as a Public company a few years back. Of course, this was after several unsuccessful years of trying to find a buyer for it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:16 PM on 05/10/2009
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GM has 13% of the US market. A few years ago they had closer to 33%.
Right now GM is on the wrong side of history.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:09 PM on 05/10/2009
- Paul I'm a Fan of Paul 32 fans permalink

The Chinese should buy up GM.

China has the cash, wants to get into auto production and has a union-friendly philosophy.

GM is available at a firesale price.

No one will buy a car from a bankrupt GM, but with China in charge there would be money to lend customers to buy the cars and viable resources to back it up.

Keep the workers and the production facilities - but bring in a completely new ownership.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:41 PM on 05/10/2009

Just because you have money doesnt mean you throw it away !!

GM is NOT available at firesale price. There is a difference between price and value. Look at GM's liabilities. No company would want to buy GM with its current labor structure and unfunded liabilities. Take care of that first and then you get some buyers.

to take care of that, GM would have to enter BK. How else can you close dealerships? With current state franchise laws, its impossible to close dealerships !!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:07 PM on 05/10/2009
- Patriot86 I'm a Fan of Patriot86 38 fans permalink

You are almost as shortsighted as our government policies towards trade. China is a communist country...they spend their dollars (from us) on weapons...they are dangerous. In order to be prosperous (like china) , we must have industry, manufacturing...these Wall street bankers create nothing and will never return us to prosperity...oh they will make some money I suppose...but main street will remain mired in depression. There are so many jobs related to autos, it is frightening. If we have to support the autos until better times, then we should do it. An American without autos is a pathetic dependent America with a completely destroyed American dream and no middle class.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:04 AM on 05/11/2009

America spends money on weapons as well.

America can still have auto's, it just needs to shift production to auto's people will buy. Look at Alabama, they have Mercedes, Kia, Hundai, and other manufacturing plants and suppliers. These businesses have been negatively impacted by the economic climate but are still making money and providing jobs despite the gov's support of GM and Chrysler. The gov should support auto and manufacturing, but not by throwing money at failing businesses.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:33 PM on 05/11/2009
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GM could sell huge numbers of cars starting tomorrow if they and the banks would let go of their traditional lending practices. Thanks to all the criminal behavior in the markets many people have bad credit right now through, in many cases no fault of their own, yet the banks and GMAC and every other lending institution still rely on your credit score to determine if you can have a car, regardless of what your cash flow or equity is.
These are some of the same credit rating agencies which gave the losers on Wall Street triple A ratings only days before they went belly up. Who gives a sh%@ what they think anymore. If good financing options were available lots of cars would start selling.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:32 PM on 05/10/2009

People are demanding that banks forgive part of mortgage debt because they are underwater and also forgive some credit card debt and you have the gall to ask for more credit !! haha

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:08 PM on 05/10/2009
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