WORLD> GM Goes Bankruptcy
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Obama: Nationalization of GM to be short-term
(Agencies)
Updated: 2009-06-02 15:05 Obama said he recognizes that even the temporary nationalization of GM "may give some Americans pause." But he called it preferable to letting the company fail outright -- or giving it more and more bailout loans, money it has gone through rapidly. The administration will provide GM with an additional $30 billion in aid to help it restructure in addition to the $20 billion the auto maker had already borrowed from the Treasury. GM will also get $9.5 billion from Canada. If all goes according to plan, on top of the 60 percent US stake and Canada's 12.5 percent, the UAW would get a 17.5 percent stake and bondholders would end up with the remaining 10 percent. Existing stockholders would be wiped out. Obama said the nation's severest economic crisis since the Great Depression had "crippled private capital markets and forced us to take steps in our financial system -- and with our auto companies -- that we would not have otherwise even considered." That has put the government "in the unwelcome position of owning large stakes in private companies." But he said "their survival and the success of our overall economy" depended on such aggressive action. It is one of the largest peacetime nationalizations. The government has taken shares in railways, steel mills, coal mines and foreclosed homes -- but most of these came at times of war. The government did take over failed savings and loans in the 1980s and, more recently, mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. In the current crisis, it has also taken significant stakes in banks and insurer American International Group. Most nationalizations have been temporary. But at least one has endured -- Amtrak rail passenger service. Obama pledged that, despite its ownership stake, the government would not try to micromanage what is still one of the world's largest automakers despite its loss of market share to foreign competitors over the past two decades. "GM will be run by a private board of directors and management team," Obama said. "They -- and not the government -- will call the shots and make the decisions about how to turn this company around. The federal government will refrain from exercising its rights as a shareholder in all but the most fundamental corporate decisions." "We're fine with that," Fritz Henderson, president and CEO of GM, told reporters in New York after the company filed for bankruptcy protection. Henderson said he hoped a leaner, quicker GM could emerge from bankruptcy protection in 60 to 90 days. The new GM would be formed "from the strongest parts of our business, including our best brands and products," said Henderson, who took over the top job with the approval of the Obama administration, which engineered the ouster of his predecessor, Rick Wagoner. Henderson declined to offer a firm timeline for how long it would take the government to sell its stake in GM, but he said: "This is a question of years, not months." GM plans to focus on four core brands -- Chevrolet, Buick, Cadillac and GMC -- and get rid of the Pontiac, Saturn, Hummer and Saab lines. The company's Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection filing came a day after a judge gave smaller rival Chrysler approval to sell most of its assets to Italy's Fiat. That moved Chrysler closer to exiting from court protection, possibly later this week, Obama noted. "Many experts said that a quick, surgical bankruptcy was impossible: They were wrong," Obama said. GM plans to permanently close nine more plants and idle three others to trim production and labor costs. Six of the plants are in GM's home state of Michigan, already hard-hit by job cuts in the auto industry. GM's assembly plant in Wilmington, Del., will close in July, followed by its Pontiac, Mich., pickup truck plant in October. Assembly plants in Spring Hill, Tenn., and Orion, Mich., will end production this fall but remain on "standby," meaning workers can be called back should the company need to increase production. One of those plants would be retooled to produce a subcompact vehicle that GM had originally planned to build in China. The closings will bring GM's US factory count to 34 by the end of 2010, down from 47 at the end of 2008. The company will shutter an additional plant by the end of 2012. GM's bankruptcy filing came amid some signs of economic improvement. The Dow Jones index closed up 221 points as investors looked past GM's woes to better-than-expected readings on US manufacturing, consumer spending and construction spending. In a painful twist, the Dow's rise came as GM itself was in the process of being removed from the roster of 30 Dow stocks -- to be replaced next week by Cisco Systems Inc. -- as a consequence of its bankruptcy filing. Top executives from General Motors and Chrysler will appear before a Senate committee Wednesday to address concerns about dealership closings as the two automakers work through government-led bankruptcies. Obama predicted that a new well-managed GM would emerge able to "out-compete automakers around the world." And, paraphrasing an oft-quoted line in 1953 by then GM chief Charles Wilson, Obama said: "And when that happens, we can truly say that what is good for General Motors and all who work there is good for the United States of America."
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