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GM CEO Fritz Henderson To Resign: AP Source (BREAKING)

TOM KRISHER and KEN THOMAS   12/ 1/09 11:34 PM ET   AP

Gm Ceo Resigns

DETROIT — GM's board and CEO Fritz Henderson parted ways Tuesday, the board upset that the automaker was changing too slowly and Henderson frustrated with second-guessing, two people close to Henderson said.

Board Chairman Ed Whitacre Jr., former head of AT&T Inc., will take over as CEO while a global search is conducted.

It was unclear whether Henderson or the board moved first in the surprise resignation, which came just hours before Henderson was to be the high-profile keynote speaker at the Los Angeles Auto Show.

At a hastily called news conference at General Motors Co.'s downtown Detroit headquarters, Whitacre would not answer questions, but said the board and Henderson agreed that he should step down.

Whitacre thanked Henderson, 51, a lifelong GM employee, for his leadership and said the company is on the right path toward offering high-quality cars and trucks worldwide.

"We now need to accelerate our progress toward that goal," the 68-year-old Whitacre said in a brief appearance on a stage.

Both men were chosen for their jobs by the U.S. government, which owns more than 60 percent of the Detroit automaker in exchange for giving it billions in loans. But Henderson is a GM insider, while Whitacre is an outsider to the whole industry, having run AT&T for 17 years.

Still, Whitacre and the board have become increasingly active in the company's decisions, at times challenging some of Henderson's moves.

In November, the board voted to abandon plans to sell GM's European Opel unit, reversing an earlier option favored by Henderson to sell it to a group led by Canadian auto parts supplier Magna International Inc.

Henderson, who rose through GM's ranks over a 25-year career, was chosen by the Obama administration to run GM in March after it forced out former CEO Rick Wagoner. His brief tenure was marked by GM's record-fast departure from bankruptcy court but also some failed deals and weak sales.

The people close to Henderson, who asked not to be identified because Henderson has not spoken, said he was frustrated from the beginning by the board and government push for faster change and other questions about his decisions.

Henderson, one of the people said, was confident that the company was making progress and thought he deserved more autonomy. In the past few months GM has stabilized its U.S. market share at around 20 percent and has shown some monthly sales increases in the U.S. and Asia.

But on Tuesday, GM released November sales figures that were 2 percent below the same month last year, when sales hit a 26-year low. The decline came after Whitacre began pushing for increased sales and market share.

Henderson, the other person close to him said, had expressed concern that his tenure was doomed from the start.

"I don't think this has much to do with Fritz Henderson's performance, I think it's just the wrong time to be a GM lifer," said Logan Robinson, a former Chrysler attorney and professor of corporate governance at University of Detroit Mercy.

GM could face difficulty in recruiting Henderson's replacement. Like other struggling companies that have received federal bailout money, any compensation package would have to be approved by federal pay czar Kenneth Feinberg.

Henderson replaced Wagoner a few months before GM entered bankruptcy protection. He led the company through a painful government-led and court-supervised reorganization.

"I think there was a perception he was too much of an insider," said Ken Elias, partner with Maryann Keller and Associates, an auto industry consulting firm. "The bankruptcy was not something that occurred because of the recession last August, it was coming for decades. The reality is GM truly needs an outsider as a leader that has no attachment."

With the government's help, the company emerged from court protection in just 40 days cleansed of massive debt and burdensome contracts that would have sunk it without roughly $52 billion in federal loans.

An Obama administration official said Tuesday in a statement that "this decision was made by the Board of Directors alone. The Administration was not involved in the decision."

Henderson continued to downsize the automaker after its emergence from bankruptcy. He sought to scale down GM to just four core brands: Chevrolet, Cadillac, Buick and GMC.

While he has largely succeeded in that goal, attempts to sell the company's other brands have hit obstacles. Swedish luxury sports car maker Koenigsegg Group AB backed out of a deal to buy GM's Saab brand. GM said Tuesday it has some interested bidders but will wind down Saab if nothing materializes by the end of the year.

Henderson's bid to sell Saturn to race car mogul Roger Penske fell through and the brand is now liquidating.

But GM was successful in winning a tentative sale of Hummer to a Chinese construction machinery maker.

In an agreement reached in October with pay czar Feinberg, Henderson's pay was cut 25 percent to $950,000, about half of what he made in 2008. In addition, Henderson received shares worth $4.2 million, to be exercised when GM became a public company again, perhaps late next year.

___

AP Auto Writers Dee-Ann Durbin in Detroit and Dan Strumpf in New York contributed to this report. Ken Thomas reported from Washington.

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DETROIT — GM's board and CEO Fritz Henderson parted ways Tuesday, the board upset that the automaker was changing too slowly and Henderson frustrated with second-guessing, two people close to He...
DETROIT — GM's board and CEO Fritz Henderson parted ways Tuesday, the board upset that the automaker was changing too slowly and Henderson frustrated with second-guessing, two people close to He...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Reiner-von-Sinn
Fol de rol de rolly O
08:10 PM on 12/03/2009
Eight months on the job. $950,000 + $4.2 million in stock options.

HP please investigate severance pay, golden parachutes, etc.

Heckuva a job Fritzie.

In your mind you earned it? What about all the hourly, family men and women who have lost their jobs.

Abrogate his contract! No options, nuthin'!

Don't we, the taxpayers, have the majority ownership position?

Fire the whole thieving, greedy executive cohort.

Bring manufacturing back to the US

If any executive makes more than 40 times the lowest paid employee than he or she is paid too much.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sposton
right to tell what they don't want to hear
01:23 PM on 12/03/2009
You want to bet that the next one is not going to be making no stinkin $950,000 per year! ;-)

I don't know about Henderson but I doubt they will find anyone better and it will be at a much higher costs. I think this is all a part of maneuvering to make a few quick billion from the GM's folly and government's stupidity. Makes you wonder why none of the Americans fat CEO's can't do this out of their love for their country and for a nominal $1 per year! ;-)
03:41 PM on 12/02/2009
Now that Obama tacked unemployment benefits he needs to set his focus no on WALL STREET REGULATION and JOBS

good articles; http://financeopinionss.blogspot.com
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
claudiam
Proud Arizona Democrat
11:52 AM on 12/02/2009
GM needs new blood that thinks outside the box. I am totally baffled why the American car industry cannot get a clue. Just take a look at the cars American's buy - fuel efficient, Toyota's, Honda's & Nissan's. We are out of date. Note to American car makers "Get with the program." claudiatucsonaz
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mcmutter
A Groover has to expect a few setbacks .....
10:58 AM on 12/02/2009
Wasn't this a$$clown bragging he had no background in the auto business and knew nothing about it....
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graffitijoe
snowballs chance n SoCal
07:39 AM on 12/02/2009
Why have a CEO at all? Obama could just appoint a Government Motors czar from among his Chicago cronies - it's the answer to everything else.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Denemator
Has the world gone nuts?
10:16 AM on 12/02/2009
Go do some teabagging squire.
06:01 AM on 12/02/2009
It's a shame. GM has some great new cars lined up for the 2011 model year. Spark and Cruze look to be very competitive in the subcompact and compact economy segments, and Volt could be an effective halo car and technology pilot.

In particular, GM's upcoming small engines are very promising. Cruze will feature a 1.4L I4 turbo that makes 140bhp. 10cc/bhp is an impressive power/volume achievement for a mass-market engine.

It's just that GM has nothing I'd like to buy *right now*. If I were to buy a new car today, it would be a Honda Fit, Nissan Versa, or VW Golf TDI (if I could afford it). The American brands don't have compact hatchbacks, and that's what makes the most sense for me and a lot of other people.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Denemator
Has the world gone nuts?
10:17 AM on 12/02/2009
I have a 2009 TDI sportwagen and a 2008 Malibu LTZ V6 both cars are fabulous.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ladyvader
Less apathy, more empathy!
01:59 AM on 12/02/2009
GM and the rest of American car makers missed the boat when it came to hybrid technology. They passed on it and Japan took the lead. That is part of their problem today. They where not looking into the future but only right here and now.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Patriot86
Compassion is the basis of all morality.
07:15 AM on 12/02/2009
Japan took the lead while their government paid for the technology needed for hybrids which do not make money even now...the best selling car right now are the SUV's those plants are on overtime. The idea that hybrids are going to lead to profit...now way unless gas goes up a great deal.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Denemator
Has the world gone nuts?
10:19 AM on 12/02/2009
Hybrid technology foisted on people is the biggest farce ever.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
zombywulf
Pirate Captain Church of Saint Jerry
10:10 PM on 12/01/2009
WOW, he stayed just long enough for them to vest his golden parachute
09:50 PM on 12/01/2009
Yea, it's always the unions. Just like if Wal-Mart ever hits a bump in the road it will be because of the workforce. Some of you here have absolutely no brains at all. The workforce rarely causes the downfall of a company. Check your facts, nearly all bankruptcies are caused by a lack of credit accessibility. High fuel prices and a very unfair trade policy is killing ALL of American jobs. Also think about this; Corporate America began by farming out blue collar jobs(with our own Government's help), those jobs are almost non existent now. White collar jobs are now the target. And because of that, job loss is suddenly an issue. How many of you know that a major computer company recently hired computer engineers from outside the country at $12K a year, and brought them here to work, when the going rate is $60K for American computer engineers? You know-it-all white collar guys better watch your backs.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Patriot86
Compassion is the basis of all morality.
07:49 AM on 12/02/2009
Exactly right...the union is the bogeyman for the failed so called free market and free trade policies which have been complete failures in terms of the country and jobs, but they do enrich our dear friends the Wall Street bankers..while destroying this country.
09:36 AM on 12/02/2009
very well said, co-sign from Germany.
08:56 PM on 12/01/2009
I think as a CEO he couldnt short the stock.

i think the amount of money he can make (if GM ever goes public) by shorting the stock is better bet than his salary as ceo :)

LOL
08:55 PM on 12/01/2009
Frankly, they got their recovery plan all wrong -- Saturn is the one brand they should have kept, as few people even realized it was part of GM and equated it with Toyota and Honda. The pricing policies, the exceptional service, all of these things were the direct opposite of the traditional GM way of doing things.

A Saturn-branded economy car with great gas mileage at a good price could be a good seller, if they hadn't decided to liquidate. Chevy and Buick still have a lot of negative baggage as brands.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DebtNavigation
Attorney and Author
09:53 PM on 12/01/2009
Buick was kind of pointless in the U.S. but its early entry into China made it a major brand there, and one capable of self-financing the development of new models in the boulevardier mode that Cadillac's newfound hard edge has abandoned. So Buick gets to stick around. Meanwhile Chevy has a tremendous Halo effect from NASCAR and a strong lineup in both trucks and cars.

Saturn simply has no product pipeline without Opel. Now that Opel won't be sold, I wonder if GM might rethink shutting down Saturn? However, that would seem to go against the notion that GM needs to change faster, even though Saturn represented the most forward-thinking arm of GM ... lots of paradoxes in GM's recent decisionmaking.

Hummer? Lightning-rod for criticisms from anyone with a green bone in their body. Definite image poison even if it did have a market.

Pontiac? It had been run into the ground just like Oldsmobile, which should have been renamed "Aurora" and made to build what Cadillac is building now, while Cadillac should have been made more luxurious and exclusive.

The Saab deal will be shown to be FUBAR from day one ... my guess is that Konigsegg never had a hope of financing it. Perhaps a Chinese or Indian firm might take a look at it. Surely the Magna/Russian alliance won't want to be burned again.
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Patriot86
Compassion is the basis of all morality.
07:51 AM on 12/02/2009
Do you have any idea how much money Saturn lost? Do you understand that Saturn and Chevy were made in the same plant...one car stamped chevy the next stamped Saturn...Buick was kept because it is the best selling car in China...the Chinese can afford to buy cars you see since they make stuff.
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mountainweb
Conservative Commonsense
08:27 PM on 12/01/2009
Heading should read "Captain of the Titanic resigns in sight of huge iceberg"
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10:19 PM on 12/01/2009
Good one. Yes I think GM has to explain why Obama's hand picked CEO suddenly bailed one day before he was supposed to give a major speech. This does not look good for GM.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Patriot86
Compassion is the basis of all morality.
07:57 AM on 12/02/2009
He was forced out by the guy from At&T. Duh...you don't have a good understanding of business. It is quite clear...it was a power play and Fritz did not have the power. Now it remains to be seen what the At&T guy can offer since he knows nothing about manufacturing cars and had a mixed record at AT&T
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Patriot86
Compassion is the basis of all morality.
07:55 AM on 12/02/2009
You better hope that is not true...if we lose our last important industry then welcome to he!! and the 100 year depression. You can not be a great country if you make nothing...and don't bleat about Toyota or Honda making cars here. They assemble cars here...all the important tech, research work is done at home...and given the Japanese record with electronics if they succeed in driving out the domestics, they will shut down all plants and leave...think about it. How many Japanese electronic plants that make televisions or video games or whatever remain open after the Japanese drove out the American companies...the answer is none. HP is busily shipping jobs to India. IBM has shipped their jobs to India..really an Indian company now-not American..where will the jobs come from? Small business, service industry jobs...it will never support this economy.
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10:56 AM on 12/02/2009
It does not matter what you or I hope for in terms of GM's future. the decision is out of our hands and we are mere spectators at what appears to be a demolition derby between GM and Chrysler. The White house got involved , selected their own person and that was Henderson. Now he is suddenly gone and a back seat driver has taken the wheel. does he have WH approval? Will he have get approval of a new CEO by the WH? Will restrictions on CEO pay limit the candidates for the job? Will anyone want to take it if they know they can be summoned to Congress and grilled? Need I add the possibility of being "shamed" by the WH? How much salary should a person be paid to be a potential whipping boy or girl? Meanwhile GM 's ship continues to founder while Ford is sailing ahead and gaining market share.
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mheister
Raconteur. Blog michaelheister.com
08:24 PM on 12/01/2009
So what's happening to Aussie subsidiary Holden???
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DebtNavigation
Attorney and Author
09:43 PM on 12/01/2009
So far they're Holden on to it.
08:16 PM on 12/01/2009
That was fast. Another one bites the dust