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July 27, 2009 2:08 PM

Is GM Bankruptcy Inevitable?

(AP)  For General Motors Corp., the task at hand is so difficult that experts say a Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing is all but inevitable.

To remake itself outside of court, GM must persuade bondholders to swap $27 billion in debt for 10 percent of its risky stock. On top of that, the automaker must work out deals with its union, announce factory closures, cut or sell brands and force hundreds of dealers out of business - all in three weeks.

"I just don't see how it's possible, given all of the pieces," said Stephen J. Lubben, a professor at Seton Hall University School of Law who specializes in bankruptcy.

In Ohio, the automaker employs thousands at a number of plants, including a major assembly complex in Lordstown, near Youngstown.

GM, which has received $15.4 billion in federal aid, faces a June 1 government deadline to complete its restructuring plan. If it can't finish in time, the company will follow Detroit competitor Chrysler LLC into bankruptcy protection.

Although company executives said last week they would still prefer to restructure out of court, experts say all GM is doing now is lining up majorities of stakeholders to make its court-supervised reorganization move more quickly.

"If we need to pursue bankruptcy, we will make sure that we do it in an expeditious fashion. The exact strategies I'm not getting into today, but we'll be ready to go if that's required," Chief Executive Fritz Henderson said last week.

The threat of bankruptcy, however, may be just a negotiating ploy to pull reluctant bondholders into the equity swap deal. In Chrysler's case, some secured debtholders resisted taking roughly 30 cents on the dollar for what they were owed, but most gave in after they were identified in court documents.

Henderson, who took over in March when the government ousted Rick Wagoner, said last week there's still time to get everything done by the deadline, although he conceded it will be difficult to meet a government requirement that 90 percent of its thousands of bondholders agree to the stock swap.

The biggest obstacle to GM restructuring out of court appears to be its bondholders, who have been reluctant to sign on to the stock swap when the government and United Auto Workers union would get far more stock in exchange for debts owed by GM.

GM has proposed issuing 62 billion new shares, 100 times more than the 611 million now offered publicly.

Even though the U.S. government has agreed to back up GM and Chrysler new-car warranties, potential car buyers already view GM as if it's in bankruptcy, reflected by the company's steep revenue drop in the latest quarter, Lubben said. On Thursday, GM posted a $6 billion first-quarter loss and said its revenue plunged by nearly half, largely because bankruptcy fears scared customers away from showrooms.

"I don't think anyone is buying cars from a company who is wringing their hands about a potential bankruptcy for the past year or so," he said.

Under Chapter 11, a company can stay in operation under court protection while it sheds debts and unprofitable assets to emerge in a stronger financial position.

At this point, GM needs to resolve the uncertainty and get in and out of bankruptcy as quickly as possible, Lubben said.

The company is talking with the UAW and Canadian auto workers unions about concessions, including getting the UAW to take roughly 39 percent of its stock in exchange for half of the $20 billion GM must pay into a union-run trust that will take over retiree health care payments next year.

About 50 percent of the stock would go to the government for its loans. GM said last week it would need another $2.6 billion in May and $9 billion more for the rest of the year, bringing the total to $27 billion.

One percent would go to current shareholders, with bondholders getting the other 10 percent.

Bondholders are reluctant to take the deal because the government and UAW are getting far bigger stakes in the company, said Kevin Tynan, an industry analyst for Argus Research in New York.

"When you look across at what the union is getting and what the government is getting, to expect them to take 10 percent is just unrealistic," he said.

Cutting dealers also remains a huge hurdle, with GM hoping to shed 2,600 of its 6,246 dealerships by 2010.

But dealers are protected by state franchise laws, and trying to shed them outside of bankruptcy would result in either millions of dollars in payments or multiple lengthy lawsuits, Lubben said.

"That means you've got to negotiate with each one of those dealers individually."

Also, GM on Friday told its major parts suppliers that it would move up payments due on June 2 to May 28.

Company spokesman Dan Flores said it was being done to help the suppliers at a critical time, but he denied that the payments were pulled ahead of a potential June 1 bankruptcy filing.

GM has begun to temporarily close 13 assembly plants for up to 11 weeks through mid-July in an effort to control inventory. With Chrysler plants also shut down during its bankruptcy proceedings, parts suppliers will soon have no income and could go under.

It would help speed up GM's stay in bankruptcy court if it could pull together big blocks of stakeholders to agree on reducing debt or changing other stakes, said Robert Gordon, head of the corporate restructuring and bankruptcy group at the Clark Hill PLC law firm in Detroit.

During its quest for government aid, GM executives said bankruptcy would severely cut their sales, with research showing that people would shy away from GM vehicles for fear that warranties would not be backed and parts would not be available.

Tynan said the executives now can't change their story, even though they likely know that bankruptcy is inevitable.

"They're sort of morally obligated to say 'we're intent on doing this outside of bankruptcy,'" he said. "But at the end of the day, they just want the magnitude of the restructuring to get done."

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment See all 22 Comments
by unlresources May 22, 2009 7:35 AM EDT
Great!!! Now I have to compete with the out of work UAW for free government cheese hand-outs. Self reliance in this country has gone the way of the dinosaur. The government can't and shouldn't be the answer to everything by providing for the masses. Thanks everyone for your vote which allows the US to become one of the largest welfare countries in the world. Oh, by the way get ready for the tax hike that's coming to keep the government in business.
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by jbar116 May 14, 2009 9:00 AM EDT
I'd say RIP but you don't deserve it GM!
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by impeachbhb May 13, 2009 7:35 AM EDT
UAW bend over and kiss you sorry buttocks goodbye.
UAW executives have screwed their members while making millions for themselves. Now the membership will have to pay the price along with the taxpayers whose money Obama and Bush wasted in trying to bail this dinosaur out.
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by vietnamwar May 12, 2009 12:13 PM EDT
Leaked GM document shows automaker plans to sell China-built cars to U.S. consumers

hah hah buy American...Trusted the American CEO's....Chinese CAR's will be the last junk on earth for me to buy...
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by vietnamwar May 12, 2009 12:12 PM EDT
Leaked GM document shows automaker plans to sell China-built cars to U.S. consumers

hah hah buy American...Trusted the Aerican CEO's
Reply to this comment
by craigh41 May 12, 2009 8:05 AM EDT
The largest misconception out there is that people believe the end of the big 3 means the end of the american auto industry. Nothing could be farther from the truth. New, smaller companies will emerge more focused on quality and consumer interests and will "make a better mouse trap".
When the dinosauers went extinct it didn't mean an end to the animal kingdom - just to that way of life. The big 3 have proven themselves to be dinosauers - they became bigger than life and completely unable to manage themselves - let them go, sell off the pieces to people that know how to operate a comapny like this - there are undoubtably a few Preston Tuckers out there that would jump at the chance once the big three aren't able to block their effforts.
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by Smalpecker May 11, 2009 3:25 PM EDT
Well ,when you have obama going to so call help the industry stay afloat ,then he makes one of them merge with a foriegn automaker Fiat,Sounds to me not only is he not helping the auto industry but adding more competition to drive the big 3 out of bussiness,fiat has smaller new technolegy cars that the big 3 can not compete with at this stage,Fiat is Italian and famous for produceing junk ,If your going to allow Fiat into the country to sell cars ,which will finish off the big 3 ,why not just lift all the tarriffs,and taxes etc off of Nissan,Toyota and the rest of the foriegn automakers and flood this country with competition ,that would be good for the consumer,giving us the ability to choose which car we want, rather than from just 3 automanufacturers ,the reason there going out of bussiness is they cant compete,they can not produce an automobile cheap enough thats a quality product ,that the consumer can afford,because of salarys,benifits and retirement packages they committed to years ago,the unions have got way to greedy and priced american cars in a bracket the average american can not afford,esp in a recession.they should have filed for bankruptcy years ago before it got this bad instead of borrowing from peter to pay paul for so long ,Fileing bankruptcy may sound bad,but in all actuality,it is a good thing ,if they want to operate at a profit in the future ,the retired employees and unions get some benifit ,if they keep operateing rather than selling the company off bit by bit , the public ,loses as there is less competition in the american car market,They need to let them file bankruptcy,reorginaize,retool there factorys,and re negeociate or rehirenew employees or ones that are willing to work for less,in times like these there are people who will work for less and if the unions dont like it ,they had there chance to give up benifits and wages so the company could survive,but told them no,no concessions,So to survive they should file bankruptcy cast off the unions and there people and hire some workers who want to work and produce a product thats cheap enough to compete in the USA and world market,and that is not solely dependent on fossiel fuels ,its time americans had a choice in what fuels they use to fuel there auto,why not produce a car that can run on Gasoline,Disel,Natural Gas,or Electric ,or a hydrogen car choice,or a combination of these,that way you have a choice of where to fill up at ,if natural gas is cheaper,then you go there if gas is cheaper you go there etc,that will bring gas prices down fast,also Honda has a Hydrogen car already developed,being tested now here in the USA,it has a home fueling station built into your garage ,that not only fuels your car but your power for your home,,Why is it that our congressmen not get off there azzes and pursue and fund this type of clean fuel burning tecnolegy,Because there in bed with big oil,the electric companies etc,The claim now is that there are not enough hydrogen fueling stations avaliable in the USA to produce a car now,well then the govt neads to get with the car companies,and together produce this system ,maybe the govt could put in the stations and the car companies could produce the cars,Honda would have no problem with this,Citizens would have no problem with it,enviromentalists would have no problem with this as water is the only by product of hydrogen cars,And it could revive a automibile industry that seems to be mired in doing things the old way bussiness as usual,instead of being proactive rather than reactive to a situation,proactive would be to go into bankruptcy with a plan,like to produce a hydrogen car line,make a deal with the government to install fueling stations while they tool up to produce this car or cars,that way instead of the government just writeing 8-10 billion dollar checks at a time to the car industry and getting nothing for it,we could move on to something new and better and not be in the stranglehold of other not so friendly countries,when it comes to our economy because of Gasoline prices,its time to turn the tables and not sit and watch what happens to us and go oh gosh thats gonna be bad when the price of fuel goes up per barrel,our leaders need to get off there butts and enter the real world here ,the space shuttle will be retireing here after 20 years of operation as the technology is so old and there is a better way to do the job and more economicaly,hum how long has the internal combustion engine been around?your telling me since the early 20,s we have not been able to come up with a more efficent cleaner burning engine or powerplant for the car,or some new technolegy that is much more efficent? Its there its just not allowed by the government and big oil and big bussiness,as everyone will have to change,is that not what our new president said he was going to bring us change for the better?lets see some real change and not a bunch of talk!
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by whitemale08 May 11, 2009 12:21 PM EDT
I hope all of you Reagonites, union-bashing idiots are ready for your neighborhoods to turn into shanty towns and tent-cities.

I hope all of you Reaganites, union-bashing idiots are ready to pay $35.00 for a Big Mac since making sandwiches at Subway and Burger King is now considered 'manufacturing'

I hope all of you Reaganites, union-bashing idiots are ready to ramp up your charity contributions to millions and millions of homeless Americans stuck in bread-lines.

I hope all of you Reaganites, union-bashing idiots are ready to be displaced as you do what Mexicans do and go anywhere to look for work.

I hope you like making sandwiches and pouring coffee alongside snotty-nosed teeny-boppers with an attitude, acting mean and sh_t.

I hope you like cleaning restrooms, getting comfortable with that plunger and taking out the trash.

I hope you like our NEW SERVICE ECONOMY!

I hope you like our NEW INFORMATION-AGE GLOBAL ECONOMY!

I hope you like our NEW POST-INDUSTRIAL GREEN ECONOMY!

I hope you like minimum wage since you hate unions!
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by not_fooled_by_Righties May 11, 2009 12:00 PM EDT
obama knew they were heading there when he handed over our 8 billion to them no one can seem to account for,what we have here is a shucking jiveing jive turky at the helm of the presidency,and for gods sake dont believe a word he says,like the space shuttle program and how he was gonna keep it going ,just ask Bill nelson our pissed off senator who supported obama,just ask all those people out of jobs in the car companies and dealers ,,obama is bringing in fiat to take over and a few more companies,he is also nationalizeing the banks bussiness etc, lol oh yea looks you in the eye telling you he is gonna help you,you turn around and its like what happened im on the floor who pulled the rug out from under me,there he is standing there with that big toothly grin on his face well dont worrie about that living on the ground is not that bad we did it in kenya all the time,get used to it ,everyone has to tighten up ,Were doin good up here in the black house got my momma moved in and my cousins are movin in next week,,and I thinks im gonna take a week or two off for a couple games of pickup baskitball wit ma boys,now that he is in office we know what real color he is,no more of that half white half black smokescreen he was pumping out to get elected,he is all black now 150% black,when you gonna get you a little white lawn jocky for the black house driveway???
Posted by Smalpecker at 2:46 AM : May 11, 2009

What a freaking racist you are!!!!
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by mutnauq4842 May 11, 2009 10:48 AM EDT
Don't ya just love it when a bunch of Indian, Chinese, and Pakistani nerds and geeks spend weeks setting up a major Rube Goldberg domino display so the world can watch the whole display collapse in just a matter of minutes?

Ya getting the symbolism here, right? Heck, even Gracie would have understood this one.
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