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GM CEO: We'll Repay The Government By The End Of June

TOM KRISHER   12/15/09 05:33 PM ET   AP

Gm Ceo Repay

DETROIT — At his first meeting with General Motors' top executives after being named chairman last summer, Edward Whitacre Jr. candidly, perhaps unintentionally, issued a warning to then-CEO Fritz Henderson.

"I don't know how to be a chairman and not a CEO," a person at the meeting remembers Whitacre saying. "I'm a guy that likes to be in charge."

Six months later, the former chief executive of AT&T Inc. is running America's largest automaker after his board forced out Henderson on Dec. 1.

Despite his claims that he knows little about cars, the 68-year Texan is clearly comfortable being in charge of General Motors. In just two weeks as CEO, Whitacre has transferred the chief financial officer to China, fired the Chevrolet and Buick-GMC brand managers, combined sales and marketing and consolidated control of its core North American market under one executive.

Whitacre seems impatient to spur the plodding culture of GM, where decision by committee, an isolated upper management and fear of risk produced mediocre cars for years. He wants to increase GM's sales and market share while shifting the company's focus from trucks to cars. He also aims to repay $8.1 billion in U.S. and Canadian government loans by the end of June. Henderson's target was late 2011.

"We've seen plenty of evidence that he has a very short time horizon and impatience," says Gerald Meyers, a former chairman of American Motors Corp. who now teaches at the University of Michigan.

Whitacre, who speaks in a folksy drawl, needs to reverse the losses that forced GM into bankruptcy protection last June. The automaker lost more than $80 billion in the four years before bankruptcy. Its U.S. market share has fallen to 20 percent. Back in 1962, before GM was worried about Toyota or Honda – or a resurgent Ford – it was more than 50 percent.

Recently, the 6-foot-4-inch Whitacre didn't hide his disdain for GM's bureaucracy. His message to about 800 workers at in a Detroit suburb: Make decisions. Take risks. Move fast. Be accountable.

"We don't want something on a desk three weeks or three months while we wrangle," he said.

He needs the work force to heed his message. At stake are billions in government loans and 45,000 U.S. jobs at a company that once was synonymous with American industrial might.

GM's shift from trucks is already under way. Trucks account for 57 percent of U.S. sales compared with 60 percent in 2006. GM has launched six new vehicles since July – all cars or car-based crossovers – that are selling well and have been favorably reviewed by critics.

In his telecom days, Whitacre showed an instinct for correctly calling changes in the market. He recognized early on that wireless technology was going to transform the phone business, says Victor Schnee, a telecom industry analyst at Probe Financial.

GM's prior management, on the other hand, failed to adjust to market changes. During the 1990s, GM made billions on high-profit pickup trucks and SUVs but management was caught flat-footed when buyers switched to smaller vehicles this decade. The company chose to invest millions in a clever hybrid system for trucks and SUVs instead of cars. When gas prices spiked to $4 per gallon in 2008, GM sold about 10,000 hybrid trucks, while Toyota sold almost 160,000 Prius hybrid cars.

Although it seems the right time for a decisive outsider, the 101-year-old automaker is now in the hands of a man who spent his career running telephone companies.

The differences between telecom and autos present Whitacre with a big challenge. AT&T provides services and no longer makes anything, while autos have thousands of parts and take two or three years to design and build, says David Cole, chairman of the Center for Automotive Research in Ann Arbor, Mich.

The board's lack of knowledge about autos could hurt the company if it makes unrealistic demands on employees, Cole says.

Whitacre will require decisiveness from his team, and in the past has shown little tolerance for those who questioned his authority.

"If you don't take orders, Whitacre doesn't want you," says Dave Burstein, editor of the DSL Prime broadband industry newsletter and a longtime telecom industry watcher. While running Southwestern Bell and then AT&T, Whitacre "demanded total loyalty and obedience," Burstein says.

"Executives at a very senior level with 20 years at the company feared his wrath."

Whitacre retired from AT&T in 2007 with a package worth more than $161.6 million. He was recruited for the GM chairmanship by a member of the old company's board. The pick was blessed by the Obama administration.

Whitacre said he turned the job down, but relented because the country needs a healthy GM.

Now he's working 14 hours a day five or six days a week as CEO. Instead of a comfortable retirement wearing jeans on his Texas ranches, he dresses in suits and lives at a Marriott hotel in GM's downtown Detroit headquarters.

William Daley, the former U.S. Secretary of Commerce and a president at SBC from 2001 to 2004, says Whitacre has a commanding personality, but tempers it with a "big heart."

"There is no question, that when Ed Whitacre's around, that's the force in the room. If you don't get that, you have a big problem," says Daley.

He believes that Whitacre will take his time looking for a CEO, but then step away in a matter of months. When he left as AT&T CEO, Whitacre didn't look over his designated successor's shoulder as chairman.

Whitacre also has departed from the old GM CEO ways, often showing up by surprise outside the executive suite to talk about the business.

Last week he visited a pickup truck factory in Flint, Mich., where he helped install a hood.

"He can be very tough, but not mean, not nasty to people," Daley says.

___

Associated Press Writers Ken Thomas in Washington and Michelle Roberts in San Antonio, AP Technology Writer Peter Svensson in New York and AP Auto Writer Dan Strumpf in New York contributed to this report.

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DETROIT — At his first meeting with General Motors' top executives after being named chairman last summer, Edward Whitacre Jr. candidly, perhaps unintentionally, issued a warning to then-CEO Fri...
DETROIT — At his first meeting with General Motors' top executives after being named chairman last summer, Edward Whitacre Jr. candidly, perhaps unintentionally, issued a warning to then-CEO Fri...
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09:44 AM on 12/17/2009
Jobless claims up again
so much for that V shaped recovery...
good articles; http://financeopinionss.blogspot.com

Time for a 2nd jobs stimulus
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Papa Swamp
Research Peon, apex predator, ocean freak.
08:00 AM on 12/16/2009
They are repaying $6.8 Billion of the $50 Billion given to them...what a deal!

American taxpayer bend over and receive.
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bluejoni2525
and we've got to get ourselves back to the garden
04:53 PM on 12/16/2009
The rest is in stock options that we will sell !!!
10:33 PM on 12/15/2009
When do we start getting our money back from GMAC? You know GMAC Mortgage/Real Estate, GMAC Finance, GMAC Insurance? How about Cerberus Capitol Management 51% owner of GMAC and owner of Chrysler LLC., which-surprise, surprise- had to claim bankruptcy as well. I know, how about if the government hadn't payed off tens of billions of dollars through the back door to JP Morgan Chase and assorted other gamblers for their bets on the derivatives markets where they had simply bet with nothing to back it up that GM would fail? Google "bear run" America had better wake up! These people robbed us, when are you going to start to get it? They built a giant casino filled it up with our money and then told us "you lose"! To add insult to injury the Mafioso's on the inside doubled down and broke the house which we then had to bail out as well!
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ObamAtomic
04:40 PM on 12/15/2009
Nice,you will back to your all ways,humongous ,hefty bonuses
and expensive crappy cars,difference is, a lot competition,BTW ,not more Bail Out
use your money wisely.
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ObamAtomic
05:04 PM on 12/15/2009
all=old
04:16 PM on 12/15/2009
Now it's AIG's turn to pay up.
03:04 PM on 12/15/2009
Great. Will the Government be paying me back then?
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BannedNBoston
Is hemp legal yet?
02:29 PM on 12/15/2009
We need a 20% tariff on imported autos and auto parts.
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02:47 PM on 12/15/2009
I'd rather they set across the board industry standards on requirements of having to purchase made in USA made parts for manufacturing that way, competition can't undercut one another by shipping production of parts to China for 1/10 the cost.
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mdlawyer2
03:45 PM on 12/15/2009
Shades of Smoot Hawley. W got us to the brink of depression and stiff international tariffs could again take us to the promised land. That's one thumbs up idea.
04:15 PM on 12/15/2009
Bush got us into the brink of depression by supporting unlimited free trade. Free trade is what brought this country's economy down. Protectionism is what made this economy the world's largest.
olddognewtrick
Half full or half empty...It's the same
02:18 PM on 12/15/2009
I'll believe the repayment when I see it...
02:14 PM on 12/15/2009
Yep, they are paying the money back alright....know how???

They just took all the health insurance away from retired GM workers.

My mom, step mom and several other GM loyal hard workers who got problems on the line working for them for 30 plus years are now without any health insurance as of January first.
So, see how they have the money to pay back, by screwing those who worked to make the company ceo more money then GOD...Thank you GM!!!!!
10:53 AM on 12/16/2009
What happened to thier Union protection?
02:07 PM on 12/15/2009
I'm tired of all these companies suddenly repaying govt. assistance and then suddenly pretending everything is OK when in fact it isn't.
good articles; http://financeopinionss.blogspot.com
11:49 AM on 12/15/2009
Don't be fooled. Yes, they r paying back a little bit, but it's not with profits. It's using taxpayer money that we gave them in the first place.

This is part of the plan to make it looks good, and to show GM is healthy, hoping ppl will buy their cars. But the truth is, they r still losing money. Only the ignorant will say, "See, GM is back. I told u they will be." GM is far from becing back and will go out of biz in the long run.....unless taxpayer money keeps pumping into the bank account.

GM is a lost cause. In the long run, they will be out of business and the taxpapyers will get zilch. Obama gave them the money to appease the car/uaw lobbyist. He knows they won't survive, but did it anyway for show.
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swengnikaerb
'ello Duckies :)
12:37 PM on 12/15/2009
You are so very, epically wrong. GM will survive.
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Patriot86
Compassion is the basis of all morality.
01:16 PM on 12/15/2009
Wrong-GM really benefited from cash for clunker..they have to really pay it back as they are not bankers.
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01:41 PM on 12/15/2009
GM benefitted, but the taxpayer suffered. Paying HUGE premiums for each "clunker" was just another transfer-payment, disguised in an incentive.

And, they are paying back a cash balance--but what about the equity-stake portion of the loans??
11:36 AM on 12/15/2009
All these entities paying back the federal loans?

I would like to see the names of all those who argued we would never get paid back.

Who were those naysayers?
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nirek
Proud progressive Vietnam vet. against WAR
11:53 AM on 12/15/2009
Good point.
But a few questions come to mind.
Why are they in a hurry? So they can get their huge bonuses ? Did they really need the help?

Was it all a scam and they took the money and made interest on it ? Am I wrong to be weary of the execs?

Nirek
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Patriot86
Compassion is the basis of all morality.
01:16 PM on 12/15/2009
The government is interfering in the business..surprise.
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the964kid
Friends don't let friends vote GOP
11:59 AM on 12/15/2009
And the big banks have already paid back over 60% of the Tarp money with interest, and they're ahead of their repayment schedule. By next year the taxpayers will have made money on the bail-outs.
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pakaal
Pigs, in cages, on antibiotics
01:26 PM on 12/15/2009
I'm sure the Republicans will find some way of spinning this as a bad thing.
11:26 AM on 12/15/2009
I'm tired of all this empty populist rhetoric by the Obama administration while so little is actually being done in terms of actions & results. Everyone is afraid to attack the culprit of this problem; capitalism for fear of being labeled a commun1st, a democrat, a liberal or even worse. ...
hat tip to http://financeopinionss.blogpsot.com

So we're stuck chasing our tails. In a month come earnings season we'll hear of the new record Goldman bonuses and the usual 'we're not going to gonna take it anymore'
11:20 AM on 12/15/2009
GM is a lost cause, I just hope the tax payer gets it's money back before it vanishes completely. I will never buy another GM produced vehicle.
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swengnikaerb
'ello Duckies :)
12:39 PM on 12/15/2009
Nice Anti American sentiment. Sell your soul to Japan, China and WalMart.
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Patriot86
Compassion is the basis of all morality.
01:17 PM on 12/15/2009
You are completely wrong...what you work for a foreign company:? If autos go this country is sunk. We absolutely can not afford to lose one good manufacturing job right now.
11:06 AM on 12/15/2009
Since the majority of the taxpayer investment has to be recouped through stock performance, I suggest the taxpayers should go out and hire the best person available, and a staff, and pay him and them accordingly - GS-level pay.

In fact, some Saddman Sachs people would be good as corporate witchcraft and fortune telling capabilities are a distinct advantage in the marketplace.