At GM, the Endgame Begins
All year, General Motors CEO Rick Wagoner has been insisting his company will never declare bankruptcy. "We're well positioned," he said in August. Company spokespeople reiterated that in October, despite the big stock market plunge. Even the company website states that "bankruptcy protection is not an option GM is considering."
Well, guess what. While announcing a $2.5 billion third-quarter loss, GM also said that its "estimated liquidity during the remainder of 2008 will approach the minimum amount necessary to operate its business." That means the company is spending way more than it's earning and, unless something changes, will run out of cash sometime early next year. The company itself hasn't raised the possibility of a Chapter 11 filing. But at this dire juncture, Wagoner and his lieutenants ought to be fired if they're not doing contingency planning for bankruptcy—since that's where companies end up when they run out of money and can't pay their bills.
There's one alternative, of course. No, it's not a desperate merger with Chrysler, which GM has now disavowed, since Chrysler is in even worse shape than GM. Salvation lies in—you guessed it—a government bailout. With the feds in full giveaway mode, GM is poised to be a major beneficiary, since it's still one of America's biggest companies, with about 140,000 employees (though shrinking quickly).
The mistake that brought GM to its knees is well known by now: It relied for too long on big trucks and SUVs that customers fled when gas prices spiked. As a result, sales have plunged 20 percent so far this year, with a dramatic 45 percent drop in October. "This type of decline is unheard of," says Tom Libby, a J. D. Power and Associates analyst.
GM is also a hit-and-run victim of the credit crunch and other factors beyond its control. GMAC, which provides financing for the majority of GM's buyers, recently tightened credit standards so much that thousands of customers couldn't get a loan, one reason GM's October sales were much worse than anybody else's, including Ford's and Chrysler's. Even GM itself can't get loans anymore, which is why its cash-flow problem is effectively a bankruptcy alert.
Wagoner & Co. have already tried a number of maneuvers to get the company back on track. GM has closed more than a dozen aging factories over the past 5 years and announced dozens of other cost-cutting measures. In fact, GM is like one of those highways that's always under construction: The company has announced reforms and taken charges for restructuring in virtually every quarter for the past four years.
Still, the damage never seems to get fixed. "What is taking so long?" wonders David Silver, an analyst at the research firm Wall Street Strategies. Last October, for instance, GM said that some of its truck and SUV production would be converted to smaller vehicles and that cars sold in Europe and Asia would be brought to the United States. "But I still see the same models in showrooms," Silver says. "Nothing Wagoner has done can be considered a strategic readjustment."
He and others have long argued that GM must take much more drastic steps—which may now be on the way. Some possibilities:
Consolidate brands. GM has eight divisions (quick, can anybody name them all?) with significant overlap. Chevrolet, Buick, Pontiac, and Saturn, for instance, share many vehicles that are nearly identical, except for the badging. Consolidation would cost some money up front to buy out dealers and close out certain brands, but it would make GM leaner and more competitive.
Pump out high-quality, smaller vehicles faster. One nice way to do this would be to shut down an old plant, retool it completely, retrain the workers, and then reopen as a Toyota-quality, made-in-the-USA operation. But that might be too expensive for a company bleeding cash.
Continue work on the electric-powered Chevy Volt. And make sure it meets the very high expectations GM has set, like being able to run 40 miles on a single charge, at an overnight recharging cost of less than $1 per day—with no quality problems!
Some help is already on the way. GM stands to get a boost of at least $5 billion from the $25 billion aid package Congress approved for the automakers in September. And all three Detroit automakers have been lobbying Washington for more help. One selling point is the devastation that a bankruptcy filing would cause. With plenty of quality cars in a crowded market, a Chapter 11 filing would be "so punishing it would virtually cripple the company," says Libby. "GM will sell other things or beg for money before they do that." The company might even admit how desperate it is.
Tags: General Motors | car manufacturers
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Conspircy of Biblical Proportions....
In short: Their is an elite ruling class of people in many developed nations of NATO and the former Warsaw pact.
The elite ruling classes have a formal agreement of dividing the spoils of war (world war 2 and to those that don't understand this agreement minor skirmishes(Iraq, Bosnia, Rwanda, Georgia or possibly world war three). Meaning they have determined what each country should produce and what they sell to the rest of the world. In the New World Order.
Through trade agreements they prevent would be entrepreneurs from providing goods or services that contradict these agreements between the elite ruling class of people.
The reason why I say this is true how could the US government allow foreign companies to opperate in the us on a non level playing field. The US government has crippled the auto industry ( The Detroit 3) on purpose because it is Japan and the EU who it is agreed upon who will make most of the cars. Japan, Korea, Taiwan(also part of china unless we want to go to war) and China will build and sale electronics for/to the world. The people running the government are traders to the republic but not to the elite(That really own or control almost every damn thing). If you ever need to borrow a large sum you will get my point( their are only a few who truly have big money you will need them if you ever make it into that arena).
The us and EU will make planes for the rest of the world Aka(Boeing and Airbus). Russia will supply most of the energy and hold us hostage every now and then. Africa will supply diamonds and other raw minerals. UK and Canada will supply world intelligence through Interpol and the mounties.
The US and Britain will supply most of the world police troops(AKA foot soldiers).
All currencies will soon be devalued and revalued using a new monetary system that will be imposed on the rest of the world. Look out for Gold Prices (when they stop selling gold) because you will soon wish you had some.
I think you get the point
US auto mfg.
Our country had a huge lead in time and technology in a tremendous industry. That being the manufacture of automobiles. Over the last six decades the UAW has managed to make all manufactured brands (past and present) virtually bankrupt. It would seem people (including the UAW) could look back at the carnage trail and get suspicious of something. I was visiting my sister in florida four years ago and some of the retired GM UAW employees were laughing about their large Christmas bonuses. I thought it didn't take a lot of imagination to see why the companies were going down the tube. There are to many workers out there with a $25 wage and benefit package that can't buy products from a buisness with a $80 benefit package. I say, let the campanies go bankrupt and the hopfully a judge can instigate sanity into the buisness of making autos. The union could avoid this (salried too) by taking a50% pay cut to keep the buisness afloat and buy more time. There apparently are some wage considerations coming in the next few years anyway. If the UAW wants to save the company as is, get with it.
The end of the republican party
Here is my prediciton:
If the government allows the big three to declare bankruptcy, we will go into an economic depression, the Republicans will be blamed, and it will be the end of the Republican Party.
Trickle down and "free" market economics will go down in history as the dumbest economic theory to have ever been tried and failed. There are taxes and regulations in EVERY country and "FREE" markets are nothing but a way to strip the wealth out of this country....IN that, the Republicans have succeeded.. in everything else important, the Republicans have failed
I'm an independent... if the Republicans don't vastly change their economic stance, which allows rich people and corporations to screw the working class and this country, I will NEVER vote for any of them again.
BTW, I'm losing my job at the end of the year, my 401k has lost 80,000 and my house is losing value.. Good job Republicans, your economic ideas are morally corrupt. I was one of the responsible people who didn't go into debt up to their eyeballs.. I guess I should have taken all the equity out of my hnouse and gone travelling.. at least I'd have some memories resulting from my life savings instead of a statement saying all my momney evaporated due to government mismanagement and the lack of regulation in our economy.
I have worked veyr hard in my life to see everything evaporate thanks to DUMB economic ideas that have proven to be complete failures.
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