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Friday, July 10, 2009, 9:54am CDT
General Motors emerges from bankruptcy
San Antonio Business Journal - by
Jerry LaMartina
General Motors Corp. emerged from
bankruptcy Friday as a new company with a changed corporate
structure, stronger financial fundamentals and a stated
intention to make customers its top priority and repay
government loans as soon as possible.
The new company has $11 billion in U.S. debt, excluding an
additional $9 billion in preferred stock. CEO Fritz Henderson
said during a conference call that the company expects to go
public sometime next year.
GM will cut an additional 35 percent of U.S. management
employees and 20 percent of salaried employees by year’s end,
Henderson said. He said he hadn’t calculated the number of
affected employees.
The company said in a release that it will cut overall U.S.
employment to about 64,000 by year’s end, down 30 percent from
about 91,000 currently.
GM filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on June 1.
“Today starts a new era for General Motors and everyone
associated with the company,” Henderson said. “Going forward,
the new General Motors is fully committed to listening to
customers, responding to consumer and market trends, and
empowering the people closest to the customer to make the
decisions. Our goal is to build more of the cars, trucks and
crossovers that customers want, and to get them to market faster
than ever before.”
The new GM will have four core brands: Chevrolet, Cadillac,
Buick and GMC. It will have 34 nameplates next year, down from
48.
GM’s ownership is divided as follows:
•
U.S. Treasury Department: 60.8 percent
•
UAW Retiree Medical Benefits Trust: 17.5 percent
• Canadian and Ontario governments: 11.7 percent
• The old GM: 10 percent
Henderson said GM intends to repay its government loans “much
sooner” than the 2015 due date.
By the end of 2010, GM will operate 34 assembly, powertrain
and stamping plants, down from 47 in 2008, and it expects its
plants to reach capacity during 2011.
Edward Whitacre Jr. is the new company’s chairman. The
company eliminated its GM North American president position, and
Henderson takes responsibility for GM’s North American
operations.
GM’s Automotive Strategy Board and Automotive Product Board
will be replaced by a single, smaller executive committee that
will meet more often and focus on business results, products,
brands and customers, the release said.
Bob Lutz has join the new GM as vice chairman, responsible
for all creative elements of products and customer
relationships. Lutz and Tom Stephens, vice chairman of product
development, will work as a team along with Ed Welburn, vice
president of design, to oversee all creative aspects of design.
GM’s brands, marketing, advertising and communications
divisions will report to Lutz. He will report to Henderson and
part of the newly formed executive committee.
The new company also eliminated its regional operating
structure and named Nick Reilly as executive vice president of
GM International Operations, based in Shanghai.
Henderson said the company will give more details of the new
corporate structure later this month.
LaMartina writes for the Kansas City Business Journal, an
affiliated publication to the San Antonio Business Journal.
http://www.bizjournals.com/sanantonio/stories/2009/07/06/daily32.html
Bankruptcy judge OKs GM sale plan
Judge approves General Motors plan to sell assets, automaker could emerge
from bankruptcy soon
By Bree Fowler, AP Auto Writer
On Monday July 6, 2009, 7:16 am
EDT
NEW YORK (AP) -- A bankruptcy judge has ruled that General Motors Corp. can
sell the bulk of its assets to a new company, potentially clearing the way for
the automaker to quickly emerge from bankruptcy protection.
U.S. Judge Robert Gerber said in his 95-page ruling late Sunday that the sale
was in the best interests of both GM and its creditors, whom he said would
otherwise get nothing.
"As nobody can seriously dispute, the only alternative to an immediate sale
is liquidation -- a disastrous result for GM's creditors, its employees, the
suppliers who depend on GM for their own existence, and the communities in which
GM operates," Gerber wrote in his ruling.
The ruling comes after a three-day hearing that wrapped up Thursday, during
which GM and government officials urged a quick approval of the sale, saying it
was needed to keep the automaker from selling itself off piece by piece.
"This has been an especially challenging period, and we've had to make very
difficult decisions to address some of the issues that have plagued our business
for decades," GM President and CEO Fritz Henderson said in a statement early
Monday. "Now it's our responsibility to fix this business and place the company
on a clear path to success without delay."
But attorneys for some of GM's bondholders, unions, consumer groups and
individuals with lawsuits against the company argued for its rejection, saying
that their needs were being pushed aside in favor of the interests of GM and the
government.
It was unclear early Monday if any of those groups planed to appeal Gerber's
decision. The deadline to appeal is noon Thursday, after which point Gerber's
order takes effect and the sale is free to close.
Last month, a group of bondholders and others took their objections to
Chrysler LLC's sale plan all the way to the Supreme Court, delaying the Auburn
Hills, Mich.-based automaker's exit from bankruptcy protection.
Several consumer groups have objected to provisions in the sale that free the
new company from liability for consumer claims related to incidents that
occurred before GM went into bankruptcy protection.
That means that people injured by a defective GM product in connection with
an incident that occurred before June 1 would have to seek compensation from the
"old GM," the collection of assets leftover from the sale, where they would be
less likely to receive compensation.
Joanne Doroshow of the Center for Justice & Democracy said in a statement the
issue "is far from over."
"It is morally reprehensible that GM will pay for injuries and deaths that
occur after the bankruptcy process, but not for the hundreds of victims who have
already been hurt by defective GM cars," Doroshow said.
GM's government-backed plan for a quick exit from Chapter 11 hinges on the
sale, which will allow the automaker to leave behind many of its costs and
liabilities. The Treasury Department has vowed to cut off funding to GM if the
sale doesn't go through by July 10.
The Detroit car maker's Chapter 11 filing on June 1 was the fourth-largest in
U.S. history.
GM will leave bankruptcy court with significantly reduced debt and labor
costs, as well as fewer dealerships and brands. But it's still operating in an
environment where fewer American are buying cars. At the current pace,
automakers will sell around 9.7 million vehicles this year. That's a reduction
from sales of more than 16 million vehicles as recently as 2007.
In June, the automaker captured 20.3 percent of the U.S. market. GM has
estimated that it can maintain a market share between 15 and 17 percent,
reflecting its plan to sell off three brands and end its Pontiac line.
GM has several new cars coming to market next year, including the Chevrolet
Volt, a plug-in hybrid electric car. The Volt might be a promising vehicle, but
with an expected $40,000 price tag it might only be a niche player, said James
E. Schrager, clinical professor of entrepreneurship and strategy at the
University of Chicago Graduate School of Business.
Upcoming small-car models such as the Chevy Cruze and Spark may fare well,
but will face heavy competition from foreign automakers already in that segment
of the market and from Ford Motor Co.'s new Fiesta, which the company has
already started advertising.
Overall, GM's major challenge will be winning back customers who have
migrated to foreign competitors. Some newer GM models have received good reviews
for quality and performance, but that hasn't persuaded enough consumers to buy
GM cars.
"The problem is the status of General Motors' brands," Schrager said. "They
have to have some really breakthrough products that work and resonate with
consumers. And they may have to slowly, over time, turn the image around."
The company has received $50 billion in taxpayer funds. In exchange for those
funds, the government will own about 61 percent of the "new GM." The Obama
administration has said it does not plan to interfere with the day-to-day
running of the company, though government has been involved in the selection of
the new company's 13-member board of directors and change of control
transactions.
The company, in consultation with the government, named former AT&T Inc. CEO
Ed Whitacre to chair the board. Whitacre is in the process of choosing four new
directors.
The United Auto Workers union, which gets a 17.5 percent stake through its
health care trust for retirees, has selected Stephen Girsky, a former GM adviser
and Morgan Stanley analyst, to serve on the board. The Canadian government,
which will control an 11.7 percent share, also will pick one member.
Henderson, who succeeded former CEO Rick Wagoner in March when the Obama
administration forced Wagoner to resign, has said he expects to remain at the
helm of the automaker as it comes out of bankruptcy.
Henderson has already said he would cut about 34 percent of GM's executive
ranks by the end of the year.
Assets that GM does not sell to the new company will become part of the
separate "old GM," which the company said Monday will be known as Motors
Liquidation Co., and will be sold to the highest bidder under court supervision.
The old GM will include a smattering of properties, several of which are
facilities already slated to be closed.
Other assets to be filed under the old GM include brands like Hummer, Saturn
and Saab, for which GM has lined up buyers. They also include all current GM
common stock, which -- despite its active trading on over-the-counter markets --
will soon be worthless.
The old GM will remain an entity until all of the facilities are sold off, a
process that could take months or years to complete.
The government has said it plans to provide about $1.18 billion to fund the
wind-down process.
Associated Press auto writers Dan Strumpf in New York, Ken Thomas in
Washington and Kimberly S. Johnson in Detroit contributed to this report.
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Bankruptcy-judge-OKs-GM-sale-apf-3047600078.html?x=0
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