Thursday, May 7, 2009

Chrysler-Fiat Will become A Global Powerhouse



J. Travis-Gm Chrysler News

As Fiat SpA CEO Sergio Marchionne is in the process of wrapping up the Fiat Chrysler deal, he is also working on purchasing GM Operations overseas, Saab, Opel(Saturn) and building a global network quickly.

If Fiat is going after GM-Opel operations, it may target some of GM's domestic brands like Saturn and Pontiac.Because the Opel vehicles and Saturn vehicles are on the same platform....?

The new Chrysler-Fiat line up of vehicle brands could be quit impressive:
Alfa Romeo,Fiat,Ferrari,Maserati,Jeep,Chrysler,Dodge,Saab,Opel(Saturn),Joint ventures with Kia,Mitsubishi,TaTa and Nissan.

By time the smoke clears Chrysler-Fiat will be larger than GM and only second in the World to Toyota! Which they could easily surpass Toyota if the auto markets pick up around the world.

I would guess Sergio believes in go big or go home.....

Monday, March 30, 2009

Auto Task Force and Obama Hands On With Auto Industry


David Shepardson / Detroit News Washington Bureau

Washington -- The Obama administration will take a much more hands-on role in the restructuring of General Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC, providing both with short-term aid but insisting on and overseeing immediate dramatic changes.

The administration has set strict timetables for GM and Chrysler to complete restructuring and if required changes are not made is likely to force the automakers into bankruptcy in the coming months.

The companies are likely to go even further in cutting staff and closing plants in order to prove their viability.

The administration's auto task force agreed to provide Chrysler with short-term aid for the next 30 days as the automaker works to complete a tie-up with Itay's Fiat SpA and said it would consider loaning the partnership up to $6 billion if a deal can be finalized.

But it warned that if Chrysler and Fiat cannot come to terms on a partnership, the Auburn Hills automaker would not get any more taxpayer money -- a move that would likely force the company's liquidation....more

Monday, March 9, 2009

President Barack Obama's auto task force visits Detroit


WASHINGTON -- The top advisers for President Barack Obama's auto task force will have a chance today to literally kick the tires on Detroit's struggling automakers before deciding how much federal aid they're worth.

The visit, spurred by invitations from the automakers, will cap two weeks of intensive research by the presidential task force into all aspects of the U.S. auto industry as it suffers the worst slump in four decades. After today's trip, the Obama administration has only days to address warnings from General Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC of imminent bankruptcy and collapse without at least $7 billion in aid by the end of the month -- $5 billion for Chrysler and $2 billion for GM....More

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Friday, December 19, 2008

General Motors and Chrysler Get Auto Rescue Loans! $17Billion


Dec. 19 (Bloomberg) -- General Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC will get $13.4 billion in initial government loans to keep operating in exchange for a restructuring under a rescue plan announced by President George W. Bush.

A bankruptcy is unlikely to work for the automakers at this time and can’t be allowed, Bush said at the White House.

“These are not ordinary circumstances,” Bush said. “In the midst of a financial crisis and a recession, allowing the U.S. auto industry to collapse is not a responsible course of action.”

The money will be drawn from the Troubled Asset Relief Program and the automakers will get an additional $4 billion from the fund in February for a total of $17.4 billion in assistance, according to a statement from the Bush administration. The funds would allow GM and Chrysler to keep operating until March.

Winning the assistance is a reprieve for GM, the biggest U.S. automaker, and No. 3 Chrysler after they said they would run out of operating funds as soon as this month. Bush is stepping in after Senate Republicans’ refusal last week to take up a House-approved rescue raised the prospect of a company failure costing millions of jobs.
...More

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

White House pressed from right, left on car rescue


WASHINGTON (AP) — Conservative Republicans admonished the White House Tuesday not to use bank-bailout billions to rescue distressed U.S. automakers, and a key Democrat demanded the government get veto power over the companies' business decisions as a condition of any aid.

The Bush administration said it was still evaluating options and suggested any deal would require major concessions by all sides. Complicating its task, lawmakers in both parties — having failed in their efforts to push a $14 billion auto rescue through a bailout-weary Congress — were pressing for an array of terms and conditions they said should be part of any Plan B.

"We are not going to be rushed into it," presidential press secretary Dana Perino declared.

Only a day earlier, President George W. Bush suggested that a rescue package would come sooner rather than later. "An abrupt bankruptcy for autos could be devastating for the economy," Bush said on Monday. "This will not be a long process because of the economic fragility of the autos."

Still, conservative Republican lawmakers, many from Southern states that are home to Japanese auto plants, wrote to Bush asking him not to use one of the most readily available pots of money — the $700 billion Wall Street rescue fund — to help the U.S. carmakers.

And the White House and Treasury Department were in talks with Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., who has been pressing for big union concessions in exchange for rescue money, on the terms and structure of a possible bailout, said a senior GOP congressional aide.

Corker came close last week to striking a deal with the United Auto Workers union for a $14 billion bill that would have forced the carmakers to bring their wages and benefits in line with those of Japanese auto companies in the U.S. by a specific date in 2009. The measure collapsed after the UAW refused to agree to wage cuts that quickly. The new contacts with the administration were disclosed on condition of anonymity because the aide was not authorized to divulge them.

Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass. weighed in as well, urging Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson to adopt the accountability provisions included in a House-passed auto bailout bill — the product of a deal with the White House — as a condition of any bridge loans to U.S. automakers. That measure would have given a Bush-appointed overseer say-so over any major business decisions by the automakers while they were taking advantage of federal aid, including the power to nix any transaction of $100 million or more.

"Given the serious mistakes that senior auto industry executives acknowledge they have made in the past, such safeguards are absolutely necessary to ensure that taxpayers are protected and that the retooling of this critical industry proceeds as quickly as possible," Frank wrote to Paulson on Tuesday.

GM and Chrysler have said they will run out of cash within weeks if they don't get help. Ford Motor Co. has said it has enough cash to survive 2009.

Perino said the administration was still working on details of the package, which could reach $15 billion for General Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC.

She said concessions had to be made in exchange for the money.

"I don't think that there's any possible way that this president would agree to allow taxpayer financing to go toward firms that are not willing to make tough decisions to become viable and competitive in the future," she said.

Bush said Tuesday that his administration was "considering all options" for helping the automakers, arguing that the already distressed economy could slide further into recession without prompt action.

"What you don't want to do is spend a lot of taxpayers' money and then have the same old stuff happen again and again and again," Bush told CNN in an interview. At the same time, he said, "we're trying to get this done in an expeditious way."

The administration indicated it would extend a helping hand to the domestic automakers after an aid effort died in Congress late last week. The White House had wanted Congress to act.

The timing and details of Plan B — the Bush administration stepping in to help the automakers directly — remain in flux. In the absence of action, lawmakers were eagerly offering up their counsel, particularly on the idea of using the $700 billion financial industry rescue fund, known as the Troubled Asset Relief Program, to help U.S. automakers.

"Congress never voted for a federal bailout of the automobile industry, and the only way for TARP funds to be diverted to domestic automakers is with explicit congressional approval," wrote 26 GOP lawmakers, led by Rep. Jeb Hensarling of Texas.

Seven Senate Republicans led by Sen. Jim DeMint of South Carolina fired off a similar missive saying that without restructuring, "we do not believe any amount of money will succeed in saving these companies."...More

Monday, December 15, 2008

What is Bankruptcy Mean For GM and Chrysler?

Will here is the description of Bankruptcy.

Bankruptcy has become fairly common in today's economy. Let's discuss what each kind is.
First there are two kinds of Bankruptcy. Chapter 7 and Chapter 13.

In Chapter 7 you are basically “restructuring” you debt. Big companies do this all the time. Their assets are frozen and the judge gets to decide how and when they pay back the outstanding debt they owe. Usually a lot of the fees and interest is taken off the account and they start with a clean slate. The company keeps all of the assets most of the time.

Now Chapter 13 is a little different, normally for individuals. In chapter 13 you don’t get to keep the assets if they are “secured debt” meaning that something of value backs the loan. A home mortgage for example is a secured debt, if you stop making the payments the bank takes your home, really quickly sometimes. For a business it might be a loan on a building or car or even computers or furniture. Anything that the bank could take back and sell. Therefore anything can be taken in a chapter 13 if it is a secured debt.

If it is not a secured debt, like anything you charge on your Visa card, the creditors cannot take it a way from you. So when you are dealing with a credit card, bankruptcy is a different story. There is no way to tell if that $1000 on your Discover card is a bunch of cheeseburgers, or the new living room set you just bought. So rule of thumb, if you buy it on plastic you keep it.

You should contact an attorney for a consultation if you are thinking about filing. There is are lot of “do it yourself” kits out there. But you need to make sure that it is done correctly if you are going to do it. Make sure it is a clean slate, with nothing left out for you to have to worry about.

Your credit is going to be (and probably already is) BAD, so make sure that you get everything taken care of.

You can only file for this protection every 7-10 years in most states. So if you are in a position where you need to file make sure and change your habits! Don't ever do this again.

Also be aware that filing adversly affects other areas besides getting a loan. For example many employers will check your credit before you are hired. If your credit is bad, you might be turned down. Employers sometimes see this as irresponsibility, dishonesty, or poor money management.

In addition insurance rates, apartment rentals, etc.

This decision will affect most areas of your life.

But if you follow the debt steps you should not ever need to use this extreme measure.

Below you will find some steps from wikihow on how to file bankruptcy. Make sure to follow them.

Sunday, December 14, 2008

White House mulling TARP funds for automakers


Harry Stoffer
Automotive News

WASHINGTON -- The Bush administration, signaling a possible shift in policy, will consider using money set aside for the rescue of financial institutions to make emergency loans to automakers, the White House said this morning.

The word comes in the aftermath of stunning rejection by the Senate last night of legislation to provide $14 billion in emergency loans to prevent the collapse of General Motors and Chrysler LLC.

President Bush and his appointees have resisted using any of $700 billion approved in October for financial institutions to provide industry help under the Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP. Democrats contend the failure of one or more automakers would have widespread devastating economic effects.

It's unclear when the White House or U.S. Treasury will make a decision about using TARP funds for the auto bailout.

Of the first $350 billion in the TARP fund, about $15 billion has not yet been committed, wire services reported this morning.

That happens to be the amount GM and Chrysler say they need to survive to the end of the first quarter of 2009.

To access the second $350 billion, the administration must seek fresh approval from Congress.

U.S. Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., said the effort to provide the emergency bridge loans remains "very much alive."

"I am encouraged that the White House said today that they will consider other options to assist the auto companies, including use of the TARP program," Levin said in a statement.

"Use of TARP funds is the fastest, most feasible, most immediate and most certain approach to provide the emergency bridge loans needed by the auto companies...more