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Archive for October, 2008

More news coming; keep an eye on Allpar over the weekend

We have now gotten three reports of a “big announcement” on November 4 or November 5, involving GM and Chrysler. Speculation includes:

  • the usual “GM giving Cerberus GMAC in return for Chrysler” rumor
  • GM being purchased (in whole or in part) by Cerberus
  • the formation of a new jointly owned company (”letting the old ones die”)
  • both GM and Nissan/Renault linking up with Chrysler somehow
  • whatever your imagination comes up with. It’s not likely to be nuttier than what some of the analysts have suggested.

We don’t know what’s happening. However, I’m pretty sure they won’t start a new auto company and let the shells of GM and Chrysler fall apart just to have revenge on the unions for not demanding better executives. Likewise, I somehow doubt Nissan/Renault would want to get too tied up in a three way match.

We suspect there is a way for GM to buy Chrysler’s assets in such a way that either union agreements or, more important, dealer agreements fall apart. We’re not lawyers, though, so we don’t know if that’s possible. You can’t just close down a brand… or can you?

It is possible that all that’s going on is an agreement to consolidate Chrysler Financial into GMAC, completely. That wouldn’t really be worth all the hyperbole, though.

Again, we’ll keep you updated - as far as we can. But be prepared for something to happen on November 4 or November 5.

Oh, and Chrysler is celebrating 25 years of the minivan on Monday morning. If we’d had more notice, we’d be covering it. It should be a fun shindig for the reporters who go there - complete with a 1984 minivan and the original program head.

GM-Chrysler deal to be quietly announced on election night? (Updated)

“The GM executive told me the big announcement will be during election evening… and that it will be very bad indeed for Chrysler.”

This statement made by a source who wishes to remain anonymous reinforces my earlier opinion. To summarize that:

The deal will involve GM getting Federal aid to acquire and largely shut down Chrysler.

The deal will be announced on November 4 because the news media, and the nation’s attention, will be distracted.

Instead of being front page news, the taxpayer financed destruction of a large automaker with a strong history of patriotism and free services to the United States military will be on page B37.

They are counting on Americans not caring, and they are probably justified.

That is — if the rumors are true. We have no reason to believe they are not.

You can find more details on this scenario in my earlier opinion.

Update: It looks like the GM deal might fall through, as the Treasury said they wouldn’t give GM a loan to merge with Chrysler. That said, keep an ear out on November 4… because several people within Chrysler and GM have now been told to prepare for “the biggest event in company history” on November 5. It is possible that Cerberus will be acquiring a stake in - or all of - General Motors. They have the capital to do it… and it’s a lifetime opportunity for a few very wealthy men.

Too big to fail, but not too big to spank

General Motors and Chrysler are still both too big to fail. It is in the nation’s interest to keep them alive and solvent, with hundreds of thousands of jobs and America’s industrial future riding on their success.

That’s not to say we should reward their leaders’ greed or incompetence with loads of cash, though.

Rick Wagoner should have done more cutting long ago, instead of waiting for the last minute. Yes, GM has brought in some of its European cars, has been rationalizing its engineering for years, and has been working on fuel efficiency for years before Americans would accept a high-mileage car (most Americans still don’t want one unless it’s from Toyota or Honda). But its brand proliferation has long passed its “more useful than costly” point, the lack of discipline around brands and nameplates has made it difficult for anyone but the most dedicated GM fans to remember them all (much less figure out what the brands are supposed to be about), and the waste of money by GM executives themselves is sensational. Little has changed, it seems, since DeLorean wrote his scathing critiques of high-flying veeps and CxOs.

At Chrysler, the problems are more severe in some ways and less severe in others. GM has some excellent cars including the Malibu, the relatively high mileage Cobalt, the G8, and, well, you know the list; but Chrysler has just two serious brands, Jeep and Dodge, and much lower costs.

The government is considering subsidies for GMAC (51% owned by Cerberus) and a combined GM-Chrysler. Based on the armchair theories of overpaid analysts with tunnel vision and surprisingly little knowledge, the current plan, which has an air of inevitability, is to have the government chip in $10 billion or so to let GM and Chrysler merge. This will “eliminate redundant capacity,” or, in other words, let them lay off tens of thousands of people and shut down factories, whose capacity will be re-created by Volkswagen, Hyundai, and others.

It’s an insane plan. That’s not an original thought, of course. Most people find the plan insane.

In past economic crises, inventive ways were found to fix these problems. A ruthlessly patriotic president, one who cares more about people than party, might gently remind Bill Gates that Microsoft has already been convicted of some crimes which remain unpunished, and by-the-way, GM and Chrysler could use some help or a new owner. A bunch of bankers could be approached and given help to GM as a condition for a share of that $700 billion bank-rescue package. I’m sure there are other alternatives that don’t involve rewarding executives with golden parachutes, continued opportunities to mis-lead companies, and essentially handing billions of dollars to Cerberus.

Even with a government bailout, there are options other than mergers. The government could rescue them, dump the entire leadership team, appoint executors to run the company until they can get a new leadership team, at which point the company would get an IPO and be sold back to investors. Socialism? Well, sure. Just like Social Security, Medicare, the Veterans’ Administration, and the $700 billion bank bailout. Let’s not get caught up in names here. We’re talking temporary emergency moves, not moving to Cuba. The amount of money we’re talking about is pretty small by bailout and war standards, and yes, I realize that’s an invalid argument.

The thing is, in any bailout there must be numerous conditions:

1. It must be permanent, yet have a fixed cost that cannot be changed in the future. No cost over-runs!

2. Executives, while benefitting from taxpayer largesse, cannot make more than the CEO of Toyota or ten times the ordinary rank and file autoworker. A good executive is internally motivated. Look at Jim Press - he spent most of his career at Toyota earning a fraction of what he’d have made as a screwup at GM. Even Juergen Schrempp was shocked at the salaries of American execs.

3. That goes for perks, too. No more company planes.

4. The goal is to rescue American jobs, not wealthy investors. What’s good for Cerberus takes a back seat. They should get some incentive to play along but not a huge payout.

5. There must be a clear exit strategy that gets the government back out of private industry again, with definite triggers and no room for fudging.

I don’t know about you, but if $10 billion of my tax money goes into GM, I want it to come back out again someday. I want it to go to creating or preserving jobs, not destroying them. I don’t want $20 million to go to investment bankers, $50 million to go to lawyers, $120 million to go to executives, and $50 billion to go to Cerberus, while watching Chrysler die and the nation’s economy falter as 1 in 25 people lose their jobs. There’s plenty of money still around; you just have to go where the money is and convince the people who have it to invest it. That might mean organizations outside the auto industry. (Like that Kaiser guy).

We’re now getting the propaganda that a GM-Chrysler merger would be bad, but not nearly so bad as bankruptcy. That’s not a real choice; it’s a false choice, a straw man argument, a false dichotomy.

If GM and Chrysler can last a few more years, they’ll be back in the green zone. This recession is project to last just two or three years - after which the markets will be back and, if they positioned themselves well, they should be able to thrive.

I’m not saying the pair shouldn’t work together. It would make a lot of sense for them to collaborate and share, and a partial ownership swap a la Nissan-Renault would be very sensible. So would a partial ownership swap with Nissan-Renault. Chrysler really does not have the resources to do everything it needs to, thanks to Daimler and now thanks to Cerberus as well. However, in time, they can rebuild, if given a chance.

DeLorenzo socks it to ‘em (or, “Give ‘em hell, Pete”)

I can’t really add anything. He really gets going in the second half.

http://www.autoextremist.com/current/

Gas falls; software is free

The price of gasoline has fallen by over a dollar at most gas stations, causing a little-known “free software clause” to kick in. As a result, CodeWeavers is giving away its software today (October 28, 2008).

Domestic automakers have apparently received some benefit as well, with big pickups and SUVs reportedly regaining some of their market share, albeit without coming close to their pre-gas-price-hike sales volume.

Another quick explanation for November 4

Much has been written about how the Chrysler-GM-GMAC-Cerberus deal (in reverse order of profitability) is slated to occur by November 4. Not much has been written about the reasons, though I proposed the only sensible (to me) explanation a few days ago - that any news coming out on November 4 would be largely ignored.

Another credible reason has recently come up, though, in eWeek magazine, of all places. Joe Wilcox wrote about Microsoft’s attempts to buy Yahoo, thereby getting a serious stake in the paid search and (perhaps more important to them) portal business. To quote:

There is no leadership. Congress is in recess for campaigning. George W. Bush is making speeches and promises actually trying to be a leader, but no one is listening. But come November 5, there will be a leader-elect who can put forth a recovery plan, calm investors, and bring some sanity to the insane panic that is driving world economies to recession and many businesses to ruin.

To me, that makes a lot more sense than any ideas about having to quickly get Federal aid before the election, because it takes months for the results of the election to actually have any impact on the people who are in office (Bush and the Congress will still be in place throughout November and December.)

Cerberus may be figuring that GM’s stock will rise after November 5, making an acquisition of a stake in GM much more expensive. Likewise, the moment sales rise, GM’s stockholders and directors will start coming back to thinking they can go it alone — which I really think they can, if they start firing on all four cylinders instead of complacently pretending we’re still in the 1970s, when times were bad for GM but nobody thought they could disappear completely.



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