The Presidential Task Force on Automobiles (PTFOA) has claimed its second Motown CEO scalp. Chrysler CEO Bob Nardelli announced his departure in paragraph eight of Chrysler’s official statement on the automaker’s Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing. “Now is an appropriate time to let others take the lead in the transformation of Chrysler with Fiat,” said Nardelli. “I will work closely with all of our stakeholders to see that this new company swiftly emerges with a successful closing of the alliance.” (Star Wars fans need apply.) Our sources tell us what common sense suggests: PTFOA head Steve Rattner read Nardelli the riot act. Nardelli joins former GM CEO Rick Wagoner in that special place where pensions are bankruptcy-proof (insured by the company), and mythical share option fortunes are bemoaned from a place of complete financial security. While Wagoner was immediately replaced by his clone, former CFO Fritz Henderson, the PTFOA has not named Nardelli’s successor. The lack of speculation speaks volumes.
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Or, as President Obama puts it, “a new lease on life.” Chrysler (“a company with a particular claim on our American identity”) will file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in Manhattan court today, as Obama has promised $3.5 billion in federal aid over the next 30 days in hopes of hitching the troubled automaker to Fiat. The case will be handled by judge Arthur Gonzalez, a veteran of the Enron and WorldCom bankruptcies. When the deal is concluded and Chrysler emerges from bankruptcy, the federal government will inject another $4.7 billion. That more than doubles the current taxpayer investment in Chrysler, which had reached $4 billion (not counting ChryFi). See President Obama’s full statement at C-SPAN.
Auburn Hills, Mich., Apr 30, 2009 – Chrysler LLC today announced that, as a result of the comprehensive restructuring plan agreed to by many of its stakeholders, it has reached an agreement in principle to establish a global strategic alliance with Fiat SpA to form a vibrant new company. It will allow Chrysler and Fiat to fully optimize their respective manufacturing footprints and the global supplier base, while providing each with access to additional markets. Fiat powertrains and components will also be produced at Chrysler manufacturing sites.
In a surprise, almost off-hand announcement, President Obama told the nation that GMAC will finance Chrysler wholesale (dealer) and retail (customer) sales, as the ailing automaker enters Chapter 11. Obama promised “fresh financing” for GMAC to do the deal. Not Chrysler Finance. The remark adds substance to rumors that the Presidential Task Force on Automobiles (PTFOA) will arrange a shotgun wedding between Chrysler Financial and GMAC, despite objections from the FDIC and the Fed. For some reason, Obama forgot to mention either the merger or the amount of Uncle Sam’s contribution to GMAC that will be needed to back up the PTFOA’s decision not to throw Chrysler into liquidation. Yet. Meanwhile, Obama reiterated his promise to stand behind ChryCo customers with a federal warranty program, details of which are still notable by their absence.
GM’s major bondholders are asking for a 58 percent stake in a reconstituted General Motors, but there are a number of challenges facing any debt-swap to relieve GM’s crushing $28b debt load. First of all, the Freep reports that some $2.7 billion worth of GM debt is covered by credit-default swaps. Since this means that ten percent of GM’s bondholders stand to receive face value for their bonds, the odds that 90 percent of GM’s creditors will take up any haircut offer seem slim. Add a bunch of angry, populist small bondholders to the equation, and you have yet another obstacle to the restructuring goal.
TTAC commentator and contributor David Holzman writes:
Like just about everyone else whose car is at least four years old, my windshield (1999 Honda Accord) is pitted enough to make driving into the sun a real chore. What can I do about it, if anything?
I tried some glass polish from one of the big mail order car stuff places, in Wash. State I think. (I’m blanking on the name, but I used to get their catalog). Cost about $20, didn’t do squat.
BTW, Car Talk got this question in the last two years, said there wasn’t anything you could do. That’s hard for me to believe.
Bloomberg reports that GM bondholders have made a counter-offer to the feds’ debt-for-equity swap proposal. Two days ago, The Presidential Task Force on Automobiles (PTFOA) offered the bondholders a 10 percent piece of a newly reconstituted “good” GM in exchange for $27 billion of paper. The bondholders reckon that should be . . . wait for it . . . 58 percent. To avoid C11, GM must convert 90 percent of its debt into equity. So, forget it. “Old” GM’s toast.
And that’s why we’ll give Chrysler and Fiat 30 days to overcome these hurdles and reach a final agreement—and we will provide Chrysler with adequate capital to continue operating during that time. If they are able to come to a sound agreement that protects American taxpayers, we will consider lending up to $6 billion to help their plan succeed. But if they and their stakeholders are unable to reach such an agreement, and in the absence of any other viable partnership, we will not be able to justify investing additional tax dollars to keep Chrysler in business.
Those damn hedge funds and their secured debt! Despite enormous pressure from the US Treasury, “holdout creditors” rejected the federal government’s offer to increase the cash part of a proposed debt-for-equity swap to $2.25 billion (up from $2 billion). A high noon Wednesday deadline came—and went. Hey! What happened to Chrysler’s “owners” Cerberus? Anyway, according to Automotive News [AN, sub], the feds—under Presidential Task Force on Automobiles leader Steve “Chooch” Rattner—are stepping-up their campaign to blame the recalcitrant bondholders for ruining their non-C11 plans to recreate the ailing American automaker as a Fed-Fiat-UAW partnership. “While the Administration was willing to give the holdouts a final opportunity to do the right thing, the agreement of all other key stakeholders ensured that no hedge fund could have a veto over Chrysler’s future success,” an “official” told AN. “Their failure to act in either their own economic interest or the national interest does not diminish the accomplishments made by Chrysler, Fiat and its stakeholders nor will it impede the new opportunity Chrysler now has to restructure and emerge stronger going forward.”










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