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GM and Chrysler reportedly in merger talks
The Fiji News.Net Saturday 11th October, 2008
The beleagured U.S. automaking industry could be in for a dramatic transformation.
A report published by the New York Times late on Friday said General Motors was in preliminary talks about a possible merger with competitor Chrysler.
Two sources close to the deal put the chances of a deal being done at 50:50.
GM shares are selling close to their 1950 levels, while its bonds and preference shares are yielding interest rates of around 20%, and selling for around .30 cents in the dollar.
Bankruptcy rumours have surrounded both GM and Ford, but both of the nation's leading car makers ruled out seeking bankruptcy protection on Friday.
Some commentators say the companies are too big to fail and that the government would not stand by and allow that to happen, because of the impact it would have on the wider economy. One analyst said Friday if necessary the government would inject capital and even take equity in the automakers, in a similar way it has with the banks.
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Comments on this story
curmad 10-11-08, 12:44 PM |
GM and Chrysler reportedly in merger talks
Investors are leary of putting their money into the stock market, but the government isn’t afraid. The difference, of course, is that the investors would be using their own money.
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Anonymous 10-11-08, 12:45 PM |
GM and Chrysler reportedly in merger talks
We are in the middle of the perfect storm.Fear of making a major purchase,competition from an unlevel playing field, a lack of appreciation of Made in America, greed by people who were judged as leaders, all force the condition we are in today.
Will the marriage of cash strapped GM and
Chrysler solve their woes, I doubt it.
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BadBob 10-11-08, 01:08 PM |
GM & Chrysler
This country is loosing its democracy and heading for capitolism and at the rate we are going, it won’t be long. Other countries are bringing us down and that we be better for them. Capitalism will stop only when the government stops buying up business. These companies that are having trouble should fail and the government should stay out of it. Let what happens happen. We have to stop foreign countries from buying up our country. Stop them from buying property, business, money, etc.
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waltky 10-12-08, 04:18 AM |
Show me the money...
:o
GM needs cash before Chrysler
October 11, 2008: Companies declined to confirm merger talks. Analysts say GM would need a lot of cash before a deal could materialize.
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For General Motors Corp. to acquire Chrysler LLC and all of its warts, GM would have to get desperately needed cash. Lots of it, according to industry analysts. With both automakers struggling to survive amid slumping sales, a slowing global economy and an unprecedented credit crunch, it’s unclear whether Chrysler’s majority owner, Cerberus Capital Management LP, would be willing to pay up, or whether the federal government might even get involved to save one or both struggling automakers.
“There’s got to be more in it for GM than just Chrysler," said Erich Merkle, an auto industry analyst with Crowe Horwath LLP, an accounting and consulting firm. “If you put two auto companies together, both that are losing money, both that are losing market share, you’ve just got an auto company that’s losing market share faster and losing more money." GM and Cerberus, which owns 80.1% of Chrysler, have held preliminary talks about an acquisition or other combination of the two automakers, according to a person familiar with the discussions who did not want to be identified because the talks have not been made public.
A tie-up between the automotive giants would be historic for the industry and solidify GM’s position as the global sales leader, which it has been in danger of losing to Toyota Motor Corp. GM and Toyota finished 2007 essentially even in vehicles sold worldwide. GM and Chrysler already have a joint venture with BMW AG making a hybrid gas-electric powertrain. While melding the companies could save money by combining management, engineering, manufacturing and administrative staffs, analysts say consolidation would bring more costs, and the rewards probably wouldn’t come for several years.
That might be too late for both automakers. Auburn Hills-based Chrysler, a privately held company, doesn’t have to open its books, but it lost at least $510 million in the first quarter and $1.6 billion last year. Its sales are down 25% so far this year, the worst drop of any major automaker. Detroit-based GM is burning up more than $1 billion in cash per month, with several analysts predicting it will reach its minimum operating cash level of $14 billion sometime next year. Sales are down 18%, and the company has lost $57.5 billion in the past 18 months, largely because of tax accounting changes.
[url=http://money.cnn.com/2008/10/11/news/companies/bc.apfn.gm.chrysler.merger.ap/index.htm: Bad timing?[/url]
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