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Thread: GM to cut 21,000 US factory jobs, shed Pontiac

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    GM to cut 21,000 US factory jobs, shed Pontiac

    DETROIT (AP) -- General Motors Corp. could be majority owned by the federal government and the United Auto Workers under a massive restructuring plan laid out Monday that will cut 21,000 U.S. factory jobs by next year and phase out the storied Pontiac brand.

    The plan, which includes an offer to swap roughly $27 billion in bond debt for GM stock, would leave current shareholders holding just 1 percent of the century-old company, which is fighting for its life in the worst auto sales climate in 27 years.

    GM is living on $15.4 billion in government loans and said Monday in a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission that it envisions receiving an additional $11.6 billion. But if GM's restructuring plan can't satisfy the government by June 1, the struggling company could go into bankruptcy protection.

    GM said that it will ask the government to take more than 50 percent of its common stock in exchange for canceling half the government loans to the company as of June 1. The swap would cancel about $10 billion in government debt.

    In addition, GM is offering the UAW stock for at least 50 percent of the $20 billion the company must pay into a union run trust that will take over retiree health care expenses starting next year.

    If both are successful, the government and UAW health care trust would own 89 percent of GM stock, with the government holding more than a 50 percent stake, CEO Fritz Henderson said in a news conference at GM's Detroit headquarters.

    President Barack Obama's administration said in a statement that the bond exchange filing is an important step in GM's restructuring but the administration has not made a final decision about taking stock for part of its loans.

    "The interim plan that GM laid out in this filing reflects the work GM has done since March 30 to chart a new path to financial viability. We will continue to work with GM's management as it refines and finalizes this plan and with all of GM's stakeholders to help GM restructure consistent with the president's commitment to a strong, vibrant American auto industry," the statement said.

    Henderson said that although the government would own a majority of GM's outstanding common shares, the Treasury "hasn't demonstrated interest in running the company," but would have someone on the board looking out for the taxpayers' interest. The task force has directed current board chairman Kent Kresa to replace several board members.

    "The shareholders, the VEBA (health care trust) and the government would want to have a someone on the board of directors," he said.

    Deals with the UAW and the Treasury have yet to be finalized, he said.

    The struggling automaker said it will offer 225 shares of common stock for every $1,000 in notes held by bondholders as part of a debt-for-equity swap. Henderson said the objective is to reduce GM's $27 billion of outstanding public debt by about $24 billion. The company estimates that after the exchange, bondholders would own 10 percent of the company.

    That would leave current common stockholders with only 1 percent, GM said. Still, GM shares rose 47 cents, or 27.8 percent, to $2.16 in midday trading.

    The plans, if successful, would reduce GM's debt by $44 billion from the present figure of about $62.4 billion.

    "We would be substantially less-levered as a company," said Henderson, who answered questions while sitting in a chair on a stage with a gray curtain behind him. At times, he drank from a glass of water on a small table nearby.

    Henderson said if the debt exchange isn't successful, he would expect GM to file for bankruptcy protection somewhere around June 1, but such a filing would be unlikely very long before the deadline. Bondholders have until May 26 to accept the exchange offer.

    Henderson said the company still prefers to restructure outside of court, but he acknowledged that the prospect of bankruptcy is more likely now that it was a few weeks ago.

    "The task at hand in terms of what we need to get done is formidable," Henderson said. "But it can be done."

    GM said it would speed up six additional factory closings that were announced in February, although it did not identify the locations. Additional salaried jobs cuts also are coming, beyond the 3,400 in the U.S. completed last week.

    Henderson said there would be three more factory closures in 2010 beyond the six that were previously planned. He expects to identify them by publicly in May. They will include assembly, engine and transmission and parts-stamping factories, he said.

    Including previously announced plant closures, the restructuring will leave GM with 34 factories at the end of next year, 13 fewer than the 47 it had at the end of 2008.

    Besides the U.S. job cuts, General Motors Canada said it plans to slash its hourly work force to from 10,300 currently to 4,400 by 2014 years.

    The company also said it plans to reduce its dealership ranks by 42 percent from 2008 to 2010, cutting them from 6,246 to 3,605. When asked how GM would accomplish that, Henderson would say only that the company would be making offers to the dealers in the coming weeks.

    Mark LaNeve, vice president of North American sales and marketing, said a big chunk of the dealership reduction -- about 450 -- would come with the elimination or sale of Saturn, Hummer and Saab. GM would then look to end relationships with dealers that do only a small volume of business with GM, and then move on to other dealers, he said.

    "We've got a cadence plan to it," he said. "I don't want to get rid of any dealers," LaNeve said, but acknowledged that that GM has had more dealers than it needs for quite some time.

    Henderson said the new plan lowers GM's break-even point in North America to an annual U.S. sales volume of 10 million vehicles. That's slightly more than the current sales rate, but most economists expect an uptick in the second half of the year.

    "This lower break-even point better positions GM to generate positive cash flow and earn an adequate return on capital over the course of a normal business cycle, a requirement set forth by the U.S. Treasury," GM said in a statement.

    The company said it would phase out its storied Pontiac brand no later than next year, and the futures of Hummer, Saturn and Saab will be resolved by the end of this year by either selling them or phasing them out.

    For Pontiac, the decision means the death of a brand known for its muscle cars including the Trans Am made famous in movies and the GTO, the subject of a nostalgic song by Ronny and the Daytonas.

    Henderson said in a news conference that the company was spread too thin to make Pontiac work.

    "We didn't think we had the resources to get this done from a product perspective," or marketing, he said.

    He said the decision was very tough for many at GM because of the 83-year-old brand's heritage.

    Henderson said talks continue with potential parties to buy a stake in Opel and are expected to continue through the end of May. He said the company would continue to have a presence in Europe as a stakeholder. He said Chevrolet is one of the fast-growing car segments in Eastern Europe and Russia.

    One of the conditions to get aid from Germany is to have a private investor take a stake in Opel, he said.


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    to be the only person employed in the state of Michigan. (e5+)

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    Manufacturing jobs in USA
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    Quote Originally Posted by slowpokemcgee View Post
    to be the only person employed in the state of Michigan. (e5+)
    Despite my low pay, and crummy job for the most part, it's still a job. I have to be extra careful at work really. Though Ann Arbor isn't so bad, there's a lot here, and a lot of jobs, and most of the people here are students who dorm, and don't work, rich kids who's parents pay for their off campus housing, professors who are well off, or old retired people. So it's not as competitive for jobs. However, you're now seeing people for other towns come here looking for work too. So who knows what's going to happen.

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    Used to be a spy until... buffalofan19 Is a message board God buffalofan19 Is a message board God buffalofan19 Is a message board God buffalofan19 Is a message board God buffalofan19 Is a message board God buffalofan19 Is a message board God buffalofan19 Is a message board God buffalofan19 Is a message board God buffalofan19 Is a message board God buffalofan19 Is a message board God buffalofan19 Is a message board God buffalofan19's Avatar
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    You're still at an advantage. You don't demand a high wage.

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    Used to be a spy until... buffalofan19 Is a message board God buffalofan19 Is a message board God buffalofan19 Is a message board God buffalofan19 Is a message board God buffalofan19 Is a message board God buffalofan19 Is a message board God buffalofan19 Is a message board God buffalofan19 Is a message board God buffalofan19 Is a message board God buffalofan19 Is a message board God buffalofan19 Is a message board God buffalofan19's Avatar
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    And not all college students who don't work are rich kids (though most of them are). I knew of some people that purely lived off of student loans. Some people don't just take money out for room, board, and books. They take out extra for every expense they have. Personally, I'm not sure if that's the greatest idea in the long run, but hey, whatever works.

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    Quote Originally Posted by buffalofan19 View Post
    And not all college students who don't work are rich kids (though most of them are). I knew of some people that purely lived off of student loans. Some people don't just take money out for room, board, and books. They take out extra for every expense they have. Personally, I'm not sure if that's the greatest idea in the long run, but hey, whatever works.
    I know, you don't have to tell me that. I've lived both on and off campus as a student.

    The thing is here, is that this is the University of Michigan. It isn't UB, Buff St, Canisius etc. Its a top school in the country, and the most expensive non Ivy League school. If you're an out of state resident, and go here, it's 40k a year!

    A good chunk of the students here are out of staters, so they're paying that 40k. Even in state, it's around 20k a year. So most all of the kids that go here have money, or there parents do, so spending money isn't an issue.

    Not to mention the school itself, and course work is so demanding, kids just don't have time to work. I know a few kids from the gym who barely have time for that because of school work, let a lone time for a part time job.

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    we give trillions to banks and aig with ZERO oversight and fucking choke the life out of a real employer that makes real products for a few billion dollars, this country is dead and unlikely to return to the 'glory' years the death of manufacturing in this country is a national disgrace
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    pills here!! treydawg Is a message board God treydawg Is a message board God treydawg Is a message board God treydawg Is a message board God treydawg Is a message board God treydawg Is a message board God treydawg Is a message board God treydawg Is a message board God treydawg Is a message board God treydawg Is a message board God treydawg Is a message board God treydawg's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Uncle Jesse View Post
    Not to mention the school itself, and course work is so demanding, kids just don't have time to work. I know a few kids from the gym who barely have time for that because of school work, let a lone time for a part time job.
    That was me in college

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    I had to take out loans to survive. I was working a full time job getting 7 an hour while doing school full time with 2 kids and 3rd on the way and my wife was in nursing school. Man did that time suck.

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