đź“° Auto News Big News: GM's bailout plan announced

Bru

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From AutomotiveNews:

http://www.autonews.com/article/20081202/ANA02/812029978/1200

GM offers cuts in brands, salaries, debt, payroll

Harry Stoffer
Automotive News
December 2, 2008 - 3:17 pm ET

WASHINGTON -- The General Motors of 2012 will have fewer brands and nameplates, thousands fewer dealers and employees, and much less debt on its balance sheet, under a restructuring plan GM gave Congress today.

GM will focus on its "core brands" of Chevrolet, Buick, GMC and Cadillac, the plan says. GM will sell Saab, shrink Pontiac to a niche brand and consider selling or closing Saturn, GM President Fritz Henderson told reporters at a briefing today.

GM also plans to trim its U.S. dealerships from today's 6,450 to about 4,700, Henderson said. It will cut about one-third of the nameplates from its vehicle lineup.

GM executives say the plan will enable the company to be profitable even if the U.S. new-vehicle market makes only a modest recovery.

GM, like Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler LLC, submitted its plan in an effort to persuade Congress and the Bush administration to approve $25 billion in emergency loans to the Detroit 3 this month.

In the starkest acknowledgment GM has made of its financial condition, the company says it needs $4 billion in federal aid by the end of the month.

Henderson, in a briefing with reporters today, refused to say what would happen if GM does not get the immediate aid it seeks. But without government support, he warned, "the company cannot fund its operations."

Request: $18 billion

GM's plan asks Congress for $12 billion in loans by the end of March. It seeks another $6 billion in revolving credit if market conditions don't turn around.

The total request is higher than the $10 billion to $12 billion that GM CEO Rick Wagoner requested of lawmakers during congressional hearings two weeks ago.

Henderson called the GM plan "a blueprint for creating a new General Motors -- one that is leaner, profitable, self-sustaining and fully competitive." Among its key features:

• Reducing the number of GM brands and nameplates, a step GM critics have demanded for years.

Henderson said GM will seek a buyer for Saab. Pontiac will be shrunk to a "specialty, niche" brand, Henderson said. GM already has put Hummer up for sale.

Under its franchise agreement with Saturn dealers, GM will seek a new course for that brand, Henderson said. Asked whether GM would sell or fold Saturn, he said he would not eliminate any options.

The brand "is just not successful," Henderson said.

The number of GM nameplates would drop from 63 today to about 40 by 2012, Henderson adde
d.

• Trimming GM's 6,450 U.S. dealerships to about 4,700.

Most reductions would occur in metropolitan areas, Henderson said.

• Reopening talks with the UAW to cut manufacturing costs further.

Henderson declined to identify the additional concessions GM will seek. But he said GM expects to be fully competitive in labor costs with Toyota Motor Corp. by 2012.

Henderson estimated GM's total U.S. head count would drop from today's 96,000 employees to between 65,000 and 75,000.

• Negotiating with lenders and bondholders to remove about $35.6 billion in debt from GM's books. At the end of September, the company owed $66 billion. Henderson said that debt load is too heavy.

GM aims to achieve through negotiation the kind of debt reduction that otherwise might occur in bankruptcy, Henderson said. The plan probably will involve some exchange of debt for stock.

Breakeven: 13 million sales

Under its plan, GM would break even if U.S. light-vehicle sales recover to just 12.5 million to 13 million cars and trucks a year, Henderson said. Over the past few months, the annualized U.S. sales rate has been less than 11 million units. From 1999 to 2007, the industry sold more than 16 million new cars and trucks each year.

In its plan, GM also agreed to have a government oversight board monitor use of the federal money. Taxpayers would get a stake in the company in exchange for the loans.

After last month's congressional hearings, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., chastised the Detroit 3 CEOs for failing to make an adequate case for federal aid.

The leaders demanded that the Detroit 3 tell Congress in detail how they would use federal loans and how they would make themselves viable for the long term.

Reacting to lawmakers' complaints that the companies' CEOs came to Washington last month in separate corporate jets, Wagoner is scheduled to return to the capital this week in a Chevrolet Malibu Hybrid.

Wagoner has agreed to accept a salary of $1 next year. The GM plan includes cuts in pay for other senior executives, and the company says it is ceasing use of its jets.

Committee hearings on the Detroit 3 loan requests are set for Thursday in the Senate and Friday in the House. As they did last month, the Detroit 3 CEOs and UAW President Ron Gettelfinger are expected to testify.

Reid and Pelosi have promised to call Congress back into session next week to consider the companies' aid pleas if the viability plans are acceptable.
 

Mook

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We've already seen GM and Ford issue their pleas for government loans, and now it's Chrysler's turn. The only privately-owned automaker of the three released a 13-page document outlining the aid it seeks from the Feds and how it plans on spending our hard-earned cash. If you want to read the full text, it's available after the jump. But the condensed version follows.

Chrysler is requesting a $7 billion "secured working capital bridge loan" by December 31st, citing the collapse of the light-duty vehicle market, the U.S. financial crisis and the global downturn in the economy as reasons it needs cash. It estimates by the end of the year it will only have $2.5 billion in working capital in the bank and that's not enough to keep the lights on through January.

The Cerberus crew is touting its partnerships, including those forged between Nissan, along with future plans to share platforms, components and "factory rationalization." It's also citing more employee cutbacks, an annual salary of $1 for CEO Bob Nardelli, and lack of bonuses for 2009 as steps the automaker has or is taking to keep costs at bay.

The section on "Providing Cars and Trucks People Want to Buy" covers plans to bring 24 major products to market between now and 2012, including a range of hybrid and electric vehicles covering "Neighborhood" EVs, City EVs, Range-extended EVs and a battery-powered EV. The latter will be assigned to government and business fleets for evaluations purposes in 2009, with sales supposedly beginning in 2010 and 500,000 examples being produced by 2013. For 2009, 73% of Dodge, Jeep and Chrysler vehicles will boast improved fuel economy over their current counterparts, some of which will be Flex-Fuel capable and the automaker is on target to offer 50% of its fleet in FFV guise by 2012.

There's no mention of consolidating, selling or killing brands, further employee cuts or the reduction of Chrysler's bloated dealer network. We get the impression that Nardelli and Cerberus are saying "We've done all we can, we just need some cash." But draw your own conclusions

[Source: Autoblog]
 

Primalzer

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I'm guessing Pontiac would be only be selling the G8 sedan, G8 ST, Solstice and Vibe. The G3, G5 and G6 would hopefully be cut. GMC needs to go, though.

See I think they're only gonna keep maybe the G6, Soltice, and maybe the G8 and G5. I think the G8 ST should be axed, it's just one of those "why?" kind of cars to me. Not something you keep around if you are trying to stave off bankruptcy.
 

Dasfinc

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See I think they're only gonna keep maybe the G6, Soltice, and maybe the G8 and G5. I think the G8 ST should be axed, it's just one of those "why?" kind of cars to me. Not something you keep around if you are trying to stave off bankruptcy.

G5 needs to go Buh-Bye, and the G8 is already being Axed for those of you who didn't read the article a while back, They are supposedly ending its life-cycle for the 2010 or 2011 model year, no plans to continue it due to CAFE.
 

Bru

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The G8 still has 5-plus years, which is a normal life cycle. Whether or not they try to keep it going after that is up to them. If Pontiac becomes a niche or specialty automaker, then there may be room for the low-volume G8 and G8 truck
 

Poopshinanigans

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My history teacher tried to convince me that GM is failing with the Volt because they haven't even run the car yet and its due out soon. I had to bitch slap him and say that they've been testing everything for the Volt on a different looking car based on the same platform. Actual Volt-bodied prototypes should be out soon, but the car isn't due for sale for another 1+ years.
 
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