Monday
Chrysler To Unveil The 500 and Electric 500 at Detroit Auto Show
Bloomberg is reporting information gleaned from anonymous sources that Chrysler will be unveiling an electric version of the Fiat 500 at the Detroit Auto Show next month.
,Fiat CEO Sergio Marchionne was quoted as saying his company plans to sell over 50,000 electric vehicles per year by 2014.
The 500 is already a popular subcompact car in Europe, and a gas version is expected to go on sale in the US next year.
Fiat 500 to test Chrysler
Chrysler Canada Inc. plans to begin selling the Fiat 500 subcompact in early 2011, providing an early test of how the alliance between the two auto makers will address the most glaring problem at the No. 3 Detroit company: the collapse in sales of its passenger cars.
The Fiat 500 is crucial for Chrysler Canada because of the particularly deep slide in passenger car sales that has afflicted all three of the Detroit auto makers here. As of the end of July, Chrysler, Ford Motor Co. and General Motors of Canada Ltd. delivered just 25 per cent of the passenger cars sold in Canada, a staggering drop from the 50-per-cent market share they held in 2000.
Fiat 500 to test Chrysler - The Globe and Mail
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Chrysler to make Fiat in Mexico: report Wall Street Journal
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Chrysler Group is planning to produce Fiat SpA's (FIA.MI) Fiat 500 subcompact at a Chrysler plant in Mexico, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing people familiar with the matter.
Chrysler is also considering what other Fiat models to introduce to the U.S. market, under directions from its Italian partner, the paper reported on its website on Sunday.
Plans also include making a small Fiat engine for the 500 at a Chrysler plant in Trenton, Michigan, and building a Fiat-derived compact car slightly larger than the 500 in the United States, a source told the paper.
The Toluca, Mexico plant, which currently makes the Dodge Journey crossover and PT Cruiser, is an attractive home for the 500 because cars could be exported to South and Central America where the Fiat brand is popular, the Journal reported.
Fiat acquired a 20 percent stake in Chrysler and entered into agreements to give it access to Fiat technology and platforms. Chrysler filed for bankruptcy in April.
Chrysler representatives were not immediately available for comment
Tuesday
Fiat 500 Vs. A Porsche Race Video
Fiat 500 Smokes A Porsche
Watch the little Fiat 500 race and destory the Porsche!Not even close!
Watch the little Fiat 500 race and destory the Porsche!Not even close!
Fiat 500 Vs. A Nissan Z350 Race Video
Fiat 500 Smokes A Nissan Z350
Watch the little Fiat 500 race and destory the Nissan Z350
Watch the little Fiat 500 race and destory the Nissan Z350
Magna plans factory at former Chrysler site
The Detroit News
Highland Park -- The site of the former Chrysler Corp. headquarters could soon be revived with a new automotive components plant.
Officials from Magna International Inc., North America's largest auto supplier, are scheduled to appear today before the Michigan Economic Growth Authority to secure tax incentives for an automotive seating facility at the site, officials confirmed Monday.
Plans are still pending approval from the state and officials, but the plant could create about 400 jobs, said Dennis Niemiec, a spokesman for Wayne County Executive Robert Ficano, who helped develop the deal.
"Mr. Ficano has been working a long time trying to get an auto facility in Wayne County," Niemiec said.
Niemiec said Ficano had been working with Magna International officials for at least the last five years to pursue a possible venture.
Representatives for Magna International, which is based in Aurora, Ontario, and has offices in Troy as well as operations in about 25 countries, could not be immediately reached for comment Monday night.
A number of projects were examined but an automotive plant "was always in the discussion," Niemiec said.
In 2005, officials approved a horse racing license requested by Toronto-based Magna Entertainment Corp., which is at least partly funded by rents and fees from Magna International plants.
Magna had proposed a $100 million, Las Vegas-style entertainment complex on 212 acres at Interstate 94 and Vining near Detroit Metropolitan Airport that was to create 1,000 jobs
....More
Chrysler Fiat Production Of The 500 At Warren Truck or Belvidere?
Chrysler Fiat is not giving up any information after Channel 4 Detroit announced that Fiat was considering building the Fiat 500 at the Warren Truck Assembly Plant. Which WTAP currently makes the Dodge Ram/Dakota and was slated to build the Rambox option that came from St. Louis. If Chrysler is to launch the 500 by 2011 they must make a decision soon.
The Belvidere Plant builds the Dodge Caliber which is still going to build the 2010 model.
There are a few good questions,which plant will lose their current production model? will Fiat build a new plant? or will production go to Mexico?
Channel 4 Fiat 500 Report--Video
Wednesday
Meet the Dodge/Fiat 500
To Shrink a U.S. Car, Chrysler Goes to Poland
To Shrink a U.S. Car, Chrysler Goes to Poland
TYCHY, Poland — For decades, automakers looking for the secret to small-car success would journey to Toyota City in Japan. These days, they are coming to Tychy.
Since Fiat effectively took over Chrysler this year, engineers from Detroit have been making monthly pilgrimages here to see something they can only envy: an auto plant that is hiring workers and earning a profit.
The mammoth Fiat plant here, which churned out nearly half a million cars last year, may hold some of the answers for Chrysler (as well as Ford Motor and General Motors), as it struggles to regain its footing after its bankruptcy and reduce its dependence on muscle-bound trucks and sport utility vehicles.
For those who remember Fiat before its ignominious retreat from the American market — the name was said to stand for “Fix It Again, Tony” — the Italian automaker may seem an unlikely role model. It left the United States in the early 1980s after widespread quality problems.
But Fiat itself has undergone a revolution under Sergio Marchionne, who became its chief executive in 2004, raising standards for quality and reliability at plants like Tychy and mastering the art of building smaller cars with high efficiency. Chrysler hopes he can do the same thing for it now that he has assumed control of the American company.
“We are lucky there is a crisis,” said the director of the Tychy plant, Zdzislaw Arlet, unable to resist a gibe at the bigger cars and trucks that have traditionally stolen the industry spotlight. “Everybody wants to build small cars now.”
At Tychy (pronounced TICK-ee), one secret is flexibility: The latest robotic technology is balanced by workers who can quickly shift models to match demand. That is one reason Tychy is operating around the clock, six days a week, while most other auto plants in Europe and the United States are running at a fraction of capacity, increasing costly nonproductive downtime.
Indeed, for visiting Chrysler engineers, going to Tychy is akin to an aging heavyweight boxer stepping into a gym where more agile bantamweight fighters train.
Chrysler’s smallest car, the Dodge Caliber compact, is one-third heavier (about 1,000 pounds) than the fast-selling Fiat 500, which is made exclusively at Tychy.
Fiat executives say their goal is not only to produce subcompact European models at Chrysler’s North American plants — but also for Chrysler managers to learn how to speed the introduction of smaller cars in the United States that Americans will want to buy, like a new version of the Sebring, while increasing efficiency the way Fiat has at Tychy.
Chrysler’s offerings, unlike those from Fiat, have long been dominated by Jeeps and S.U.V.’s and big trucks like the Dodge Ram, with cars making up just 30 percent of Chrysler’s worldwide sales last year. As bigger vehicles fell out of favor because of high gasoline prices and the recession, Chrysler’s overall sales dived, falling 44 percent in the first half of 2009 compared with the period a year earlier.
“It’s very difficult to go from big to small, but they are here to compare and learn,” Mr. Arlet said as he walked amid the sparks thrown off by robots along his production lines. “This plant was designed to produce small cars.”
The ideal combination of automated robots and individual workers has been critical to Tychy’s success, said Ron Harbour, an American industry consultant with Oliver Wyman, a consulting firm. Success is not as simple as the more robots, the better.
“With people, you can change the mix in one day or one week,” Mr. Harbour said, referring to the models a production line churns out. “You can’t do that with robots.”
The Tychy plant employs about 5,000 people, including about 1,700 hired last year to make more Fiats, as well as the Ford Ka.
Tychy’s huge scale — it covers more than 4.3 million square feet — also works to its advantage.
Although exact benchmarks are difficult, Mr. Harbour mentions Chrysler’s plant in Belvidere, Ill., as a comparable site, since it produces smaller cars. But its annual production capacity of 265,000 is just over half of the plant at Tychy.
Mr. Arlet is also constantly on the lookout for time- and money-saving improvements, adding that he himself looks to Toyota’s famous Kaizen system for inspiration: Instead of filling up cars at different production points with brake fluid, gasoline, water and other liquids, one machine on each of Tychy’s three lines fills each vehicle.
“A car comes off the assembly line every 55 seconds,” Mr. Arlet said. “In 1996, it took twice as long.”
Along with the new technology came a new focus on quality. About three years ago, workers were assigned an individual identification number that is stamped on whatever sections of the car they assemble so any problems at the end of the line can be traced to the source.
As a result, Mr. Arlet said, the number of cars coming off the line with defects has fallen from 20 percent in 1996 to just 4 percent now — a figure Mr. Harbour said compared favorably to factories in the United States or Western Europe.
“At the moment, Tychy is the best of Fiat as far as quality is concerned,” said Giuseppe Volpato, a professor of economics at the University of Venice who has long studied the company. “I think Poland is becoming the reference point for the whole organization, even in Italy.”
For Mr. Marchionne, turning around Chrysler will probably be harder than getting Fiat back on track. Chrysler not only relies on trucks and S.U.V.’s, it derives 75 percent of its sales from the now-moribund American market.
At the same time, Chrysler is facing increased pressure from Ford, as well as G.M., which emerged from bankruptcy last week. And of course, the original high-quality, small-car brands, like Toyota and Honda, remain fierce competitors, even if Toyota is suffering great losses of its own.
Partly because of the need to move quickly, the pace of cultural exchanges like the visits to Tychy has quickened since Chrysler emerged from bankruptcy on June 10. Fiat took a 20 percent stake in return for technology and know-how that the Italian automaker says is worth $10 billion in lieu of any cash.
Not only engineers and line managers are heading to Europe for the grand tour — so is the top brass.
Late last month, the executives responsible for Chrysler’s three brands, along with the heads of manufacturing, engineering and styling, traveled to a proving ground halfway between Milan and Turin for a weekend of meetings and motoring with their Italian counterparts.
Back in Tychy, Mr. Arlet seemed amazed at the tectonic shift under way in the global auto industry, with Americans coming to Poland in search of the secrets of carmaking, rather than the other way around.
With a confident smile, he declared, “I am looking forward to when the Fiat 500 is made in the U.S.A. and also made here, and we can compare.”
Monday
Chrysler sale to Fiat appealed To The Supreme Court
Indiana pension funds group asks Supreme Court to block deal
David Shepardson / Detroit News Washington Bureau
Washington -- Lawyers for a group of Indiana pension funds have filed a long-shot emergency appeal with the U.S. Supreme Court seeking to block a deal that would allow Chrysler LLC's emergence from bankruptcy, which could come as early as today.
The appeal came a day after a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals in New York approved the sale of Chrysler's "good" assets from bankruptcy to form a new company, Chrysler Group LLC. That firm will be majority owned by a United Auto Workers' health care trust fund. Fiat SpA, which will own 20 percent, will be able to acquire another 15 percent of Chrysler by meeting three benchmarks and will not have to put up any money for its stake. Fiat's CEO Sergio Marchionne will be CEO of Chrysler as well.
In a 39-page appeal filed before midnight Saturday, lawyers for the pension funds wrote: "The negative economic consequences of permitting an unlawful sale to proceed may well over time dramatically outweigh Chrysler's short-term harm. The public is watching and needs to see that, particularly when the system is under stress, the rule of law will be honored and an independent judiciary will properly scrutinize the actions of the massively powerful executive branch."
The petition was referred to Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who handles emergency appeals for the 2nd Circuit. She can rule on the matter herself or refer it to the entire Supreme Court. Five of the nine justices would need to vote to hear the appeal and extend a stay blocking Chrysler's sale. By late Sunday evening, the court had not yet ruled.
The Indiana funds hold $100 million of Chrysler's $6.9 billion in secured debt. The funds cover about 100,000 workers and retirees in Indiana.
The U.S. Appeals Court on Friday upheld a May 31 bankruptcy court ruling clearing the way for the sale of most of Chrysler's assets to a group including Fiat and the UAW's health care trust fund. The UAW fund will hold a 55 percent stake, while the U.S. and Canadian governments will hold 10 percent. Fiat has the right to withdraw from the deal if Chrysler hasn't exited bankruptcy by June 15.
The appeals court gave creditors until 4 p.m. today to convince the Supreme Court to hear the case. If not, Chrysler could close on its sale soon afterward.
Much of the Indiana pension funds' arguments against the sale rely on internal e-mails between Chrysler and members of the Obama auto task force, which showed the overarching role of the government in pushing Chrysler into bankruptcy and directing the carmaker's actions ahead of the filing.
Legal experts said the creditors have a high hurdle to vault, since the High Court accepts just a fraction of the cases it receives -- and even fewer emergency cases for review.
But the case would represent the first time the court could rule on the legality of the $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program, the Wall Street bailout fund that Congress approved last fall. The creditors have challenged the use of the funds for automakers.
The Treasury Department agreed to pay off secured creditors of Chrysler with $2 billion in cash for $6.9 billion in debt -- or about 29 cents on the dollar.
The Indiana funds purchased the debt at an average price of 43 cents on the dollar -- meaning they would lose roughly $13 million on their $42 million investment.
Friday
Dealers Fight Chrysler Franchise Cuts in Court
NEW YORK, June 4 -- Eldon Palmer was preparing for a grand opening of his upgraded Chrysler dealership -- a $3.2 million project he pursued at the automaker's urging -- when the letter came.
In formal language that seemed to belie their 52-year business relationship, Chrysler informed Palmer that his Indiana dealership, along with another he runs, would be among the 789 dropped as the automaker seeks to emerge from bankruptcy as a new leaner, healthier company.
"We were ready to roll," said Palmer, recounting the millions he has spent over the past two years expanding his Chrysler brands and putting them under one roof in a new facility. He had done so, Palmer added, at the request of Chrysler, which was trying to establish a more efficient dealership network.
One after another, Chrysler dealers slated for closure took the witness stand Thursday in a federal bankruptcy courthouse in Lower Manhattan. Some openly wept.
Chrysler, which plans to emerge from bankruptcy as a new company led by Italian automaker Fiat, is seeking court approval to terminate agreements with roughly a quarter of its dealerships. Thursday's hearing is to be followed by oral arguments Tuesday, after which U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Arthur J. Gonzalez will rule.
Chrysler executives have said that whittling down a bloated dealer network was necessary to be more competitive with foreign manufacturers. The executives said the company used business criteria such as sales productivity and customer service satisfaction to determine which dealers to cut. Chrysler also wants to bring its three product lines -- Chrysler, Dodge and Jeep -- under one dealership roof.
During cross-examination by a Chrysler attorney, Palmer acknowledged that his dealership met a mere 37 percent of its sales target for 2008. "It was embarrassing," Palmer said, in part blaming the poor showing on the condition of the building he purchased, which he has since renovated. "It is a beautiful facility now.
Larry Crain, a dealer in Little Rock, told a similar story, saying he invested in expanding his product offering at the encouragement of Chrysler. And like many others, Robert Melvin, a Nevada dealer, testified that he bought more cars from the company in recent months at the request of executives as Chrysler, faced with plunging sales, tottered on the brink of bankruptcy with insufficient cash flow.
He received a rejection letter last month. To his dismay, Melvin added, he received a shipment of more cars from Chrysler last week.
Despite the dealers' pleas, bankruptcy experts said the dealers have an uphill legal battle. In bankruptcy proceedings, companies have more leverage to ignore state franchise laws that protect dealers. And even if the dealers succeed in preserving their dealership agreements, the nature of the Chrysler case complicates the dealers' battle.
Chrysler is seeking to sell most of its assets to a new company led by Fiat, but the dealer contracts are with the "old" Chrysler that is being liquidated.
"It's a long shot," said Scott Van Meter, managing director of LECG, a consulting firm.
Furthermore, in an opinion approving the sale this week, Judge Gonzalez noted that the underlying argument of many opposing the transaction is the desire to have the government protect every stakeholder from economic loss -- not just those that the government perceives as being essential to the survival of a successful new Chrysler.
"For example, any dealership rejection that is approved will cause hardship to the particular dealership involved but may well be necessary if New Chrysler is to survive," Gonzalez wrote.
Monday
Judge Approves Chrysler Fiat Deal
A bankruptcy judge approved the sale of substantially
all of U.S. automaker Chrysler's assets to a group led by
Italy's Fiat SpA(FIA.MI) in an opinion filed late on Sunday. Chrysler's bankruptcy, also financed by the U.S. Treasury,
has been widely seen as a test run for the much bigger and more
complex reorganization of GM. The GM plan as detailed by U.S. officials is for a quick
sale process that would allow a much smaller GM to emerge from
court protection in as little as 60 to 90 days. "Now the hard part begins, which is making GM and Chrysler
competitive.
Chrysler Owes $400 Million To Suppliers and Bob Lutz Joins List
Some surprising companies and people stand in a long line of those with unsecured claims against bankrupt Chrysler.
The list of creditors that are owed big money by bankrupt Chrysler includes many suppliers such as Johnson Controls and Visteon. But there’s also Bob Lutz, a former vice chairman and president of Chrysler, where he worked for 12 years starting in 1986, whose compensation ran in the millions of dollars annually. A claim of an undisclosed amount will be filed and ruled on by the court in the coming weeks. See the top 10 list of creditors filing claims with Chrysler.
Chrysler Top Ten Creditors
Ohio Module Mfg. Co. -- $70,337,248
BBDO Detroit Inc. -- $58,055,133
Johnson Controls Inc. -- $50,312,511
Continental Automotive -- $46,995,802
Cummins Engine Company -- $43,912,930
Germersheim Spare Parts -- $36,231,566
Comau Inc. -- $32,069,462
Visteon Corp. -- $25,608,790
New Process Gear -- $19,636,149
Denso International -- $18,704,831
Thursday
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.....
Saturday
Chrysler expected to sell assets to Fiat
NEW YORK – Chrysler LLC is expected to file a motion Saturday to sell substantially all of its assets to Italian automaker Fiat Group SpA, but the ailing automaker must still deal with creditors who refused to come to a deal to erase the company's debt.
Attorneys for Chrysler say eight plants will not be affected by the sale, including five that the automaker revealed it will shutter by the end of next year.
While Chrysler faced its first hearing Friday in Manhattan bankruptcy court, court documents showed the Big Three automaker planned to close plants in Michigan, Missouri, Ohio and Wisconsin that employ about 4,800 people. Chrysler said they will be offered jobs at other plants.
The company also announced President and Vice Chairman Tom LaSorda is retiring effective immediately.
Judge Arthur Gonzalez approved a series of motions at Friday's hearing, launching a chain of events designed to ensure Chrysler's bankruptcy process is the quick and "surgical" one the company and the U.S. government have promised.
But what could prove to be the case's biggest challenge still lies ahead. Chrysler must eventually deal with creditors who defied government pressure to wipe out the automaker's debt and might have helped the company avoid a bankruptcy filing in the first place.
Another hearing was scheduled for Monday, where Chrysler attorneys will ask Gonzalez to let the company start using $4.5 billion in loans from the U.S. and Canadian governments to keep operating under bankruptcy protection.
Chrysler, the nation's third-largest car manufacturer, filed for bankruptcy protection Thursday. The company plans to emerge in as little as 30 days as a leaner, more nimble company, with Fiat potentially becoming the majority owner.
In return, the federal government agreed to give Chrysler up to $8 billion in additional financing, on top of the $4 billion the company already has received.
Chrysler attorney Corinne Ball said that lawyers on Monday would ask to set a date for the first hearing on the sale of its assets to the "new Chrysler." In bankruptcy, assets are sold in a two-part process during which the court asks for competing bids. None are expected in Chrysler's case, since documents show the company already tried to form alliances with dozens of companies, including Nissan-Renault, Toyota, Honda, Volkswagen and even rival General Motors Corp.
Heidi Sorvino, bankruptcy partner at Smith, Gambrell & Russell LLP, said a sale could be completed in 30 to 60 days.
"I think the sale will happen quickly," she said. "The actual proceeding is going to take a long time."
Until the deal with Fiat closes, the automaker plans to idle all of its plants in the U.S. Chrysler's Canadian assembly plants also halted production Friday because of parts shortages stemming from the U.S. shutdown.
In court documents, Chrysler said it won't keep its Sterling Heights, Mich., plant that makes Chrysler Sebrings and Dodge Avengers, and the Conner Avenue plant in Detroit that makes Dodge Vipers. The St. Louis North plant that makes Dodge Ram pickups would also close.
Chrysler's Twinsburg, Ohio, parts stamping plant and Kenosha, Wis., engine plant will also be shuttered.
Two other plants that will be left out of the Fiat sale are the St. Louis South plant and an assembly plant in Newark, Del., that were idled last year. Another facility, Chrysler's Detroit Axle plant, is already scheduled to be replaced by a new factory near Port Huron, Mich.
The "new Chrysler" would lease the eight plants, then shutter them by December 2010.
"While some facilities may close, substantially all Chrysler employees will be offered employment with the new company," Chrysler spokeswoman Dianna Gutierrez said. "Employees currently located at a facility identified for disposition will be offered a position at one of the facilities sold to the new company."
Gonzalez approved Chrysler's motion to allow the automaker to pay $48.8 million in employee and contract worker pre-bankruptcy wages, benefits and businesses expenses. The motion also references an estimated $86 million in employee vacation benefits that it may not ultimately have to pay.
The judge also approved Chrysler's motions that will let it continue to honor its warranties and continue its current banking practices.
It's uncertain when Gonzalez will face objections from the creditors that hold $6.9 billion of the automaker's debt.
Four banks holding 70 percent of the debt agreed to a deal that would give the lenders 29 cents on the dollar. But a collection of hedge funds refused to budge, saying the deal was unfair because they deserve to recover more than other creditors like the United Auto Workers.
President Barack Obama on Thursday chastised the funds for seeking an "unjustified taxpayer-funded bailout" after Chrysler and his auto task force cleared the company's other hurdles, including the Fiat deal and a cost-cutting pact that the UAW ratified this week.
Chrysler's bankruptcy filing is the latest step in a drastic reordering of the American auto industry, which has been crushed by higher fuel prices, the recession and customer tastes that are moving away from the gas-guzzling SUVs that were once big money makers.
The government already has sunk about $25 billion in aid into Chrysler and GM.
GM faces its own day of reckoning on June 1, a date the administration has set for it to come up with its own restructuring plan. GM has announced thousands of job cuts, plans to idle factories for weeks this summer and has even offered the federal government a majority stake in the company as it races to meet the deadline.
Like at Chrysler, debt may be the stumbling block. GM has asked its unsecured bondholders to exchange $27 billion of debt for a 10 percent stake in the automaker. The creditors balked, saying that would leave them with just pennies on the dollar and that they deserve a majority stake if they give up their claims.
Friday
Chrysler Fiat News-Chrysler is in court today for bankruptcy hearing
DETROIT – Chrysler's first hearing in a New York courtroom Friday morning may offer the first clue as to whether a quick, "surgical" bankruptcy is possible. The nation's third-largest automaker filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection Thursday with an ambitious plan to emerge in as little as 30 days as a leaner, more nimble company.
After months on government life support, Chrysler is pinning its future on a top-to-bottom reorganization and plans to build cleaner cars through an alliance with Italian automaker Fiat. In return, the federal government agreed to give Chrysler up to $8 billion in additional aid and to back its warranties.
On Friday morning, bankruptcy court Judge Arthur Gonzalez is scheduled to hear the case's first motions, which typically will allow the company to continue paying workers and basic utility costs as it restructures.
Eventually, Gonzalez will have to sort out the key issue that made bankruptcy necessary: the creditors that hold $6.9 billion of the Chrysler's debt.
Four of the largest banks holding 70 percent of the debt agreed this week to a deal that would give them $2 billion. But a collection of hedge funds refused to budge, saying the deal was unfair and would only return a small fraction of their holdings.
President Barack Obama on Thursday chastised the funds for seeking an "unjustified taxpayer-funded bailout" after Chrysler and his auto task force cleared the company's other hurdles. Along with the Fiat deal, Chrysler adopted a cost-cutting pact with the UAW this week.
"They were hoping that everybody else would make sacrifices and they would have to make none," Obama said. "I don't stand with those who held out when everybody else is making sacrifices."
One lender, OppenheimerFunds Inc., said it rejected the government offer because it "unfairly asked our fund shareholders to make financial sacrifices greater than the sacrifices being made by unsecured creditors."
The White House said Chrysler could come out of bankruptcy in 30 to 60 days. Under normal circumstances, it would be difficult to complete such a large bankruptcy so quickly.
But John Pottow, a University of Michigan professor who specializes in bankruptcy, said the government's level of involvement is much greater than in a typical corporate bankruptcy.
"If you have the president of the United States who wants something to happen, I think anything's possible in bankruptcy protection," he said.
In the meantime, Chrysler said it will close all of its plants starting Monday and they will remain closed until the company comes out of bankruptcy. At least three Detroit-area factories sent workers home Thursday after suppliers stopped shipping parts over fears they would not be paid.
"A lot of us are scared," said Steve Grabowski, 33, who has worked at a Warren, Mich., parts stamping plant for seven years and was sent home Thursday. "We knew something like this was going to happen, but we didn't think it would be so soon."
Chrysler CEO Robert Nardelli announced he would step down when the bankruptcy is complete and take a post as an adviser with Cerberus Capital Management LP, which will give up its 80 percent ownership of Chrysler under the automaker's plan. Vice Chairman Tom LaSorda, who once ran the company when it was owned by the German automaker Daimler, said he would retire.
Chrysler's bankruptcy filing is the latest step in a drastic reordering of the American auto industry, which has been crushed by higher fuel prices, the recession and customer tastes that are moving away from the gas-guzzling SUVs that were once big money makers.
The administration has sunk about $25 billion in aid into Chrysler and rival General Motors Corp.
GM faces its own day of reckoning on June 1, a date the administration has set for it to come up with its own restructuring plan. GM has announced thousands of job cuts, plans to idle factories for weeks this summer and has even offered the federal government a majority stake in the company as it races to meet the deadline.
Like at Chrysler, debt may be the stumbling block. GM has asked its unsecured bondholders to exchange $27 billion of debt for a 10 percent stake in the automaker. The creditors balked, saying that would leave them with just pennies on the dollar and that they deserve a majority stake if they give up their claims.
When Chrysler emerges from bankruptcy, the United Auto Workers union will own 55 percent of the automaker and the U.S. government will own 8 percent. The Canadian and Ontario governments, which are also contributing financing, would share a 2 percent stake.
Under the deal, Chrysler would gain access to Fiat's expertise in small, fuel-efficient vehicles. The U.S. automaker eventually wants to build cars that could get up to 40 mpg, far more economical than its current fleet focused on minivans, Jeep SUVs and the Dodge Ram pickup.
In exchange, Fiat would initially get 20 percent of the company, but its share could rise to 35 percent if certain benchmarks are met, and Fiat said Thursday it could get an additional 16 percent by 2016 if Chrysler's U.S. government loans are fully repaid. Fiat would also gain access to the North American market through Chrysler factories and dealerships.
Fiat CEO Sergio Marchionne said he planned to spend time meeting Chrysler's employees and touring its plants over the next few weeks.
He said Fiat was preparing for Chrysler to "re-emerge quickly as a reliable and competitive automaker." Fiat also plans to reintroduce brands like Alfa Romeo in North American markets.
The Fiat deal and bankruptcy cap a disastrous time for Chrysler.
Chrysler lost $8 billion last year and its sales through March were down 46 percent compared with the year-earlier period, leading some auto industry analysts to question whether Chrysler can survive even in bankruptcy.
But company executives told reporters Thursday that Chrysler vehicles with Fiat's fuel-efficient technology should reach showrooms in 18 months.
Vice Chairman Jim Press said Chrysler has cut expenses to operate profitably at a lower sales volume, and he said it would be able to take advantage of Fiat's distribution network to sell more vehicles globally.
Chrysler's LaSorda said in court papers that the automaker started to think about potential alliances as early as fall 2006, when Chrysler was still owned by DaimlerChrysler AG.
In the spring of 2007, LaSorda began negotiations with Nissan-Renault that went through several iterations, and Chrysler also started talks with GM in June 2008. The two companies even studied how much could be saved through a combination, but by November the worsening U.S. economy forced GM to focus on its own liquidity problems.
LaSorda named a number of other carmakers that Chrysler approached, including Toyota Motor Corp., Volkswagen AG, India's Tata Motors, the Hyundai-Kia Automotive Group, Russia's GAZ, Mitsubishi and Honda Motor Co., as well as a number of Chinese automakers. He said it had also approached some suppliers and parts manufacturers.
Despite the turmoil with Chrysler and GM's looming deadline, Obama urged consumers to keep buying cars.
"If you are considering buying a car, I hope it will be an American car," he said.
Stephen Manning reported from Washington. Associated Press writers David N. Goodman in Warren, Mich., Kimberly S. Johnson in Detroit and Vinnee Tong in New York contributed to this report.
After months on government life support, Chrysler is pinning its future on a top-to-bottom reorganization and plans to build cleaner cars through an alliance with Italian automaker Fiat. In return, the federal government agreed to give Chrysler up to $8 billion in additional aid and to back its warranties.
On Friday morning, bankruptcy court Judge Arthur Gonzalez is scheduled to hear the case's first motions, which typically will allow the company to continue paying workers and basic utility costs as it restructures.
Eventually, Gonzalez will have to sort out the key issue that made bankruptcy necessary: the creditors that hold $6.9 billion of the Chrysler's debt.
Four of the largest banks holding 70 percent of the debt agreed this week to a deal that would give them $2 billion. But a collection of hedge funds refused to budge, saying the deal was unfair and would only return a small fraction of their holdings.
President Barack Obama on Thursday chastised the funds for seeking an "unjustified taxpayer-funded bailout" after Chrysler and his auto task force cleared the company's other hurdles. Along with the Fiat deal, Chrysler adopted a cost-cutting pact with the UAW this week.
"They were hoping that everybody else would make sacrifices and they would have to make none," Obama said. "I don't stand with those who held out when everybody else is making sacrifices."
One lender, OppenheimerFunds Inc., said it rejected the government offer because it "unfairly asked our fund shareholders to make financial sacrifices greater than the sacrifices being made by unsecured creditors."
The White House said Chrysler could come out of bankruptcy in 30 to 60 days. Under normal circumstances, it would be difficult to complete such a large bankruptcy so quickly.
But John Pottow, a University of Michigan professor who specializes in bankruptcy, said the government's level of involvement is much greater than in a typical corporate bankruptcy.
"If you have the president of the United States who wants something to happen, I think anything's possible in bankruptcy protection," he said.
In the meantime, Chrysler said it will close all of its plants starting Monday and they will remain closed until the company comes out of bankruptcy. At least three Detroit-area factories sent workers home Thursday after suppliers stopped shipping parts over fears they would not be paid.
"A lot of us are scared," said Steve Grabowski, 33, who has worked at a Warren, Mich., parts stamping plant for seven years and was sent home Thursday. "We knew something like this was going to happen, but we didn't think it would be so soon."
Chrysler CEO Robert Nardelli announced he would step down when the bankruptcy is complete and take a post as an adviser with Cerberus Capital Management LP, which will give up its 80 percent ownership of Chrysler under the automaker's plan. Vice Chairman Tom LaSorda, who once ran the company when it was owned by the German automaker Daimler, said he would retire.
Chrysler's bankruptcy filing is the latest step in a drastic reordering of the American auto industry, which has been crushed by higher fuel prices, the recession and customer tastes that are moving away from the gas-guzzling SUVs that were once big money makers.
The administration has sunk about $25 billion in aid into Chrysler and rival General Motors Corp.
GM faces its own day of reckoning on June 1, a date the administration has set for it to come up with its own restructuring plan. GM has announced thousands of job cuts, plans to idle factories for weeks this summer and has even offered the federal government a majority stake in the company as it races to meet the deadline.
Like at Chrysler, debt may be the stumbling block. GM has asked its unsecured bondholders to exchange $27 billion of debt for a 10 percent stake in the automaker. The creditors balked, saying that would leave them with just pennies on the dollar and that they deserve a majority stake if they give up their claims.
When Chrysler emerges from bankruptcy, the United Auto Workers union will own 55 percent of the automaker and the U.S. government will own 8 percent. The Canadian and Ontario governments, which are also contributing financing, would share a 2 percent stake.
Under the deal, Chrysler would gain access to Fiat's expertise in small, fuel-efficient vehicles. The U.S. automaker eventually wants to build cars that could get up to 40 mpg, far more economical than its current fleet focused on minivans, Jeep SUVs and the Dodge Ram pickup.
In exchange, Fiat would initially get 20 percent of the company, but its share could rise to 35 percent if certain benchmarks are met, and Fiat said Thursday it could get an additional 16 percent by 2016 if Chrysler's U.S. government loans are fully repaid. Fiat would also gain access to the North American market through Chrysler factories and dealerships.
Fiat CEO Sergio Marchionne said he planned to spend time meeting Chrysler's employees and touring its plants over the next few weeks.
He said Fiat was preparing for Chrysler to "re-emerge quickly as a reliable and competitive automaker." Fiat also plans to reintroduce brands like Alfa Romeo in North American markets.
The Fiat deal and bankruptcy cap a disastrous time for Chrysler.
Chrysler lost $8 billion last year and its sales through March were down 46 percent compared with the year-earlier period, leading some auto industry analysts to question whether Chrysler can survive even in bankruptcy.
But company executives told reporters Thursday that Chrysler vehicles with Fiat's fuel-efficient technology should reach showrooms in 18 months.
Vice Chairman Jim Press said Chrysler has cut expenses to operate profitably at a lower sales volume, and he said it would be able to take advantage of Fiat's distribution network to sell more vehicles globally.
Chrysler's LaSorda said in court papers that the automaker started to think about potential alliances as early as fall 2006, when Chrysler was still owned by DaimlerChrysler AG.
In the spring of 2007, LaSorda began negotiations with Nissan-Renault that went through several iterations, and Chrysler also started talks with GM in June 2008. The two companies even studied how much could be saved through a combination, but by November the worsening U.S. economy forced GM to focus on its own liquidity problems.
LaSorda named a number of other carmakers that Chrysler approached, including Toyota Motor Corp., Volkswagen AG, India's Tata Motors, the Hyundai-Kia Automotive Group, Russia's GAZ, Mitsubishi and Honda Motor Co., as well as a number of Chinese automakers. He said it had also approached some suppliers and parts manufacturers.
Despite the turmoil with Chrysler and GM's looming deadline, Obama urged consumers to keep buying cars.
"If you are considering buying a car, I hope it will be an American car," he said.
Stephen Manning reported from Washington. Associated Press writers David N. Goodman in Warren, Mich., Kimberly S. Johnson in Detroit and Vinnee Tong in New York contributed to this report.
Thursday
Fiat News-Chrysler to file for bankruptcy
Chrysler to file for bankruptcy
WASHINGTON – Chrysler will file for bankruptcy after talks with a small group of creditors crumbled just a day before a government deadline for the automaker to come up with a restructuring plan, two administration officials said Thursday.
The Obama administration had long hoped to stave off bankruptcy for Chrysler LLC, but it became clear that a holdout group wouldn't budge on proposals to reduce Chrysler's $6.9 billion in secured debt, according to the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the filing plans are not public. Clearing those debts was a needed step for Chrysler restructure by the Thursday night deadline.
Bankruptcy doesn't mean the nation's third largest automaker will shut down. And the privately-held Chrysler is expected to sign a partnership agreement with the Italian company Fiat as early as Thursday as part of its restructuring plan. A Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing would allow a judge to decide how much the company's creditors would get.
President Barack Obama is expected to discuss the nation's auto sector at noon Eastern.
The Treasury Department's auto task force has been racing in the past week to clear the major hurdles that prevented Chrysler from coming up with a viable plan to survive the economic crisis ravaging nation's automakers.
Along with the Fiat deal, the United Auto Workers ratified a cost-cutting pact Wednesday night. Treasury reached a deal earlier this week with four banks that hold the majority of Chrsyler's debt in return for $2 billion in cash.
But the administration said about 40 hedge funds that hold roughly 30 percent of that debt also needed to sign on for the deal to go through. Those creditors said the proposal was unfair and were holding out for a better deal.
"While the administration was willing to give the holdout creditors a final opportunity to do the right thing, the agreement of all other key stakeholders ensured that no hedge fund could have a veto over Chrysler's future success," said one of the administration officials.
A third person briefed on Wednesday night's events said the Treasury Department and the four banks tried to persuade the hedge funds to take a sweetened deal of $2.25 billion in cash. But in the end, this person said most thought they could recover more if Chrysler went into bankruptcy and some of its assets were sold to satisfy creditors. This person asked not to be identified because details of the negotiations have not been made public.
When it files for bankruptcy, Chrysler would continue operating and Fiat would still sign on as a partner on Thursday, the people said. The government already has promised to back Chrysler's warranties in an effort to allay customers' fears that the automaker wouldn't be around to honor them.
President Barack Obama's auto task force in March rejected Chrysler's restructuring plan and gave it 30 days to make another effort, including a tie-up with Fiat. The company has borrowed $4 billion from the federal government and needs billions more to keep operating. President Obama said Wednesday night while the lender talks were still ongoing that he was "very hopeful" that deals can be worked out to keep Chrysler LLC a viable automaker, and more hopeful than he was a month ago that the company will stay in business.
The UAW agreement, which would take effect May 4, meets Treasury requirements for continued loans to Chrysler Corp., and includes commitments from Fiat to manufacture a new small car in one of Chrysler's U.S. facilities and to share key technology with Chrysler.
Meanwhile, the Fiat partnership means Chrysler CEO Robert Nardelli could be out of a job. In an April e-mail to employees, he said that if the deal is completed, Chrysler would be run by a new board appointed by the government and Fiat. The new board, Nardelli wrote, would pick a CEO "with Fiat's concurrence."
Sergio Marchionne, CEO of the Italian automaker, told reporters earlier this month that he could run Chrysler. Obama said Wednesday that Fiat's management "has actually done a good job transforming their industry."
Krisher reported from Detroit. Associated Press Writers Ben Feller in Washington, Colleen Barry in Milan, Italy, Kimberly S. Johnson in Detroit and David Eggert in Lansing, Michigan, contributed to this report.
Wednesday
Chrysler Fiat News-Obama praises autoworkers, says Chrysler deal uncertain
President Barack Obama said today he did not know whether a deal preventing a collapse of Chrysler LLC would be done before Thursday's deadline, and praised American autoworkers for their sacrifices to the industry's survival.
Speaking at a town hall meeting in Missouri marking his 100th day in office, Obama said his auto task force sent Chrysler and General Motors Corp. back to redo their business plans because their initial sustainability plans were not realistic. GM has until June 1 to deliver its new plan.
As for Chrysler: “We don’t know yet whether the deal is going to get done.”
Chrysler and the administration reached an agreement with large Chrysler debt holders to swap $6.9 billion in secured debt for $2 billion in cash. But 40-odd investment firms and hedge funds have to agree in unison to the swap, or the government will take Chrysler to bankruptcy court to force it into place.
Chrysler must also complete a deal with Fiat S.p.A., which appears close at hand.....More
Tuesday
Chrysler Fiat-U.S. Reaches Deal With Chrysler Banks, Person Says
By John Hughes
April 28 (Bloomberg) -- The U.S. has reached agreement with banks on terms to reduce debt of Chrysler LLC, according to a person with knowledge of the negotiations.
The banks’ representatives agreed to forgo $6.9 billion in debt in return for $2 billion in cash, said the person, who declined to be identified discussing the private talks. The deal is one of the steps Chrysler needed to avoid a bankruptcy after April 30.
Bankruptcy remains a possibility for Chrysler, the person said. All 46 banks involved need to ratify the terms, and it isn’t likely that all would, the person said. In that case, a quick, surgical type of bankruptcy may be needed to bring any dissenting banks into an agreement, the person said.
Chrysler, operating with $4 billion in U.S. loans, faces an April 30 deadline to restructure its costs or risk losing government support.
Shawn Morgan, a Chrysler spokeswoman, declined to comment.
Monday
Chrysler, Fiat Make Progress
Italian carmaker Fiat took a step closer to clinching a crucial deal with Chrysler after the U.S. carmaker's unions gave their strongest signal yet that they were willing to ratify a tentative deal and Chrysler's chief executive expressed his commitment to qualify for U.S. emergency loans.
Chrysler, which has 8,000 unionized workers in Canada, is under immense pressure to secure a partnership with Fiat after the Obama administration threatened to suspend federal aid for Chrysler unless it secured a deal with the Italian carmaker.
In a first significant step toward meeting the deadline, Chrysler's Canadian and U.S. unions signalled that they were willing to pave the way to an agreement. On Sunday, the Canadian Auto Workers union ratified a new collective agreement with Chrysler to allow layoffs and pay cuts by about C$19 ($15.61) an hour, that would save the automaker about $198.0 million annually, the union said. It also includes the elimination of a third shift at a plant in Ontario, Canada.
Separately, the United Auto Workers union announced that it had also reached a tentative agreement with Chrysler, Fiat and the U.S. government on further concessions on a contract and a healthcare trust agreed with the automaker in 2007.
But while a thumbs-up from unions makes a deal between Chrysler and Fiat more likely, another obstacle is Chrysler's large debt pile. "The bigger unknown at the moment is the banks," said Massimo Vecchio, an analyst with MedioBanca. Lenders to Chrysler are reportedly owed $7.0 billion, but Fiat and the U.S. government are pushing the lenders to forgive $5.5 billion of the debt in exchange for a 5.0% stake in the company, the analyst said.
"It's difficult to say if at the end they will clinch a deal under the current terms. But Fiat will only take Chrysler if Chrysler's debt is negotiated," the analyst said.
Chrysler also signalled its willingness to avoid having to file for bankruptcy protection. The company's chief executive RobertNardelli said that German automaker Daimler was working with Cerberus Capital Management to divest Daimler's 19.9% stake in the struggling U.S. automaker. The top priority was to preserve Chrysler and the entire leadership team was focused on completing the required deals to qualify for emergency U.S. government loans, Nardelli said in a memo obtained by Reuters.
Last week, Sergio Marchionne, Fiat's outspoken chief executive, said that he was confident his company could reach a deal with near-bankrupt Chrysler. "In light of what I know today, I see no reason why it won't happen," Marchionne told reporters in Milan. (See "Can Sergio Marchionne Save Chrysler?")
Still, Fiat could even explore a potential partnership even if Chrysler files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection from creditors, a source close to the Italian carmaker told the Associated Press. Chrysler and the U.S. Treasury Department were preparing paperwork for bankruptcy filings, one as a reorganization in Chapter 11 with government funding and the other as a liquidation if no government money is available, sources in the United States have said, the AP reported.
But on Monday Chrysler said it was working "diligently to finalize our alliance with Fiat and restructure our business by the government's April 30 deadline".
Thursday
UAW focusing on talks with Chrysler
DETROIT – The United Auto Workers union has placed concession talks with General Motors Corp. on the back burner as it tries to reach a deal with Chrysler LLC before an April 30 government deadline, two people briefed on the negotiations said Thursday.
The decision likely means that any deal with Chrysler will set the pattern for concessions granted to GM as both companies try to show the government they have cut costs enough to get more government loans.
The people, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the talks are private, said the union is focusing on Chrysler because its government deadline to cut labor costs and swap debt for equity is just two weeks away.
Chrysler also has to ink an alliance deal with Fiat Group SpA by April 30 to get more government aid. Without further help, Chrysler likely would be auctioned off in pieces under bankruptcy court supervision.
GM's government deadline is June 1, but the Obama administration said it will provide bankruptcy financing if the company can't successfully restructure outside of court.
GM spokeswoman Sherrie Childers Arb and UAW spokeswoman Christine Moroski would not comment on the negotiations. Chrysler spokeswoman Shawn Morgan would not comment beyond a statement that the company has a goal is to reach a conclusion by April 30.
The Canadian Auto Workers union has said that it plans to resume negotiations with Chrysler on Monday after Fiat CEO Sergio Marchionne said the Italian automaker will walk away from the proposed tie-up unless Chrysler's unions agree to major cost cuts.
Canadian Industry Minister Tony Clement said Thursday that the CAW must make significant concessions to ensure Chrysler survives. Without a deal in the next two weeks, the Canadian government will also shut down its support for the troubled automaker, Clement said.
Chrysler, GM and Ford Motor Co. all reached concession deals with the UAW in February to limit overtime, cut lump-sum cash bonuses and eliminate cost-of-living pay increases. The union also agreed to suspend the jobs bank in which laid-off workers are paid most of their wages.
Workers at Ford, which is not receiving government aid, ratified their deal, but the GM and Chrysler agreements were never presented to union members because they got hung up on funding for a union-run trust that will take over retiree health care expenses next year.
Then, the Obama administration said last month that the cuts outlined in GM and Chrysler's viability plans didn't go far enough, and the union would have to give up more. Just how much more has not been stated publicly.
GM has received $13.4 billion in government loans and may need more money this month as it tries to survive the worst auto sales downturn in 27 years. Chrysler has received $4 billion and may also need more funding to stay alive until its deadline.
The government said it will lend Chrysler up to $6 billion more if it completes a deal with Fiat and gains concessions from unions and debtholders.
But creditors that hold $6.9 billion in Chrysler debt — mostly banks and hedge funds — have rejected an offer from the Treasury Department to erase the debt for $1 billion. They are preparing a counteroffer that likely will include more cash and an equity stake in the company.
A committee representing the holders of $28 billion in GM bonds is awaiting an offer from the company that aims to slash its unsecured debt by at least two-thirds.
Associated Press Writer Rob Gillies in Toronto contributed to this report.
Wednesday
Fiat CEO: Concessions or no alliance with Chrysler
Santiago Esparza / The Detroit News
Fiat Group SpA CEO Sergio Marchionne is ready to walk away from a proposed alliance with beleaguered Chrysler LLC if the automaker's union workers do not agree to concessions that would put their pay on the same scale as workers at U.S. plants owned by foreign car companies.
In a story posted today on The Toronto Globe and Mail's Web site, Marchionne said not getting concessions from the UAW and CAW are a breaking point for talks.
"Absolutely we are prepared to walk," he said in the story. "There is no doubt in my mind. We cannot commit to this organization unless we see light at the end of the tunnel.".......More
Monday
Chrysler's new deal-Different owners and Marchionne-led management team
Different owners, a new board of directors and maybe a Marchionne-led management team
TURIN, Italy — As Chrysler LLC negotiates an alliance with Fiat S.p.A. that would satisfy the Obama administration, sources say the companies are discussing a revised ownership structure, a new board and possibly a different management team for Chrysler.
Among the options being discussed is a direct role in Chrysler's operations for Fiat CEO Sergio Marchionne — possibly even the chief executive's job.
Sources close to the merger negotiations say that after completing the deal, the plan is to elect a seven-member Chrysler board that would include representatives from Fiat and possibly President Barack Obama's automotive task force.
But the companies face major obstacles in getting the deal done. The ownership of the future Chrysler is still subject to complex negotiations involving Cerberus Capital Management LP, Daimler AG, the UAW and the big banks that hold Chrysler's debt.
A person familiar with the negotiations said the new management structure would divide the roles of CEO and chairman between two executives. The job of Chrysler chairman would be held by an American, the source said.
Since 2007, Chrysler's chairman and CEO jobs have been held by Bob Nardelli, appointed by Cerberus.
On March 30, Obama gave Chrysler and Fiat until the end of April to prove their alliance is workable. The government then would grant Chrysler up to $6 billion in additional loans. Chrysler already has received $4 billion.
Obama impressed
Marchionne (mar-kee-OHN'-nay) — the energetic, chain-smoking architect of Fiat's turnaround — has led the Italian automaker since 2004. In his March 30 speech about the auto industry, Obama praised Marchionne and described Fiat as a company where "the current management team has executed an impressive turnaround."
Another source familiar with the negotiations said Obama's task force may even dictate that Marchionne be directly involved in running Chrysler.
It's unclear whether Marchionne would try to exert hands-on control of Chrysler in the style of Carlos Ghosn, the CEO of Renault and Nissan. But there is evidence that he might try. The 56-year-old executive already spends several days each month in the United States, usually at the offices of Fiat's Case New Holland subsidiary in suburban Chicago.
Every other Friday evening, Marchionne boards a chartered overnight flight, snatching a few hours of sleep and arriving Saturday morning in Chicago. After two days working in America, he catches the red-eye return flight on Sunday.
Marchionne, who speaks accent-free English, holds both Italian and Canadian citizenships and earned university degrees in Toronto and Windsor, Ontario. He spent a decade working in Canada.
Asked about possible changes, Chrysler spokesman Todd Goyer issued a statement: "Chrysler has no management changes to announce. The job of Chrysler's current management team is to get the company on a solid foundation moving forward."
Obstacles remain
Speaking last week at the New York auto show, Chrysler co-President Jim Press said he is optimistic that Fiat and Chrysler can meet the government's requirements and form an alliance.
But he cautioned that Chrysler is preparing for bankruptcy if the alliance does not work out. "We've got to be prepared to take care of the equity and the assets," he said.
Besides the negotiations over the ownership of the future automaker, Chrysler negotiators are in talks with UAW officials about reducing Chrysler's $10.6 billion obligation to the union's health care trust.
The Treasury Department also is negotiating with the major banks holding $6.9 billion in Chrysler debt, according to a Bloomberg News Service report. Bloomberg said the four largest lenders are JPMorgan Chase & Co., Citigroup, Goldman Sachs Group and Morgan Stanley.
Cerberus has offered to give up its stake in Chrysler. Cerberus Chairman Stephen Feinberg is involved in the negotiations. Cerberus also must iron out a dispute in its effort to acquire Daimler's 19.9 percent stake in Chrysler. Cerberus aims to consolidate its ownership as part of the overall plan to restructure the company.
Speaking at a shareholder meeting last week in Berlin, Daimler CEO Dieter Zetsche said Cerberus was making "unacceptable" demands in negotiations to acquire the remainder of Daimler's stake.
The two sides have been wrangling since November over a Cerberus request to acquire Daimler's stake. Daimler sold majority ownership of Chrysler to Cerberus in 2007.
Fiat would own biggest slice of Chrysler under latest scenario proposed by U.S.
Instead of Cerberus Capital Management and Daimler AG holding 80.1% and 19.9%, respectively, of Chrysler LLC, there will be a larger cast.
Under the latest scenario proposed by the U.S. government, Fiat SpA will have the largest block of Chrysler, at 20%. The remaining 80% will be allocated among a variety of secured creditors that include at least five banks and U.S. taxpayers.
Cerberus and Daimler likely will hold much smaller stakes because they still hold loans that helped finance the August 2007 acquisition of the Auburn Hills-based automaker.
Even the UAW could end up owning a piece of the company.
"They are trying to trade debt for equity among the current creditors," said Tom Stallkamp, a former DaimlerChrysler vice chairman and president. He is now a partner in Ripplewood Holdings LLC, a private equity fund. "It's all based on how much of a haircut the debt holders will accept."
Coincidentally, those debt holders include some of the giant banks -- J.P. Morgan Chase, Citicorp, Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs -- that auto industry advocates argue have benefitted from a double standard in how they accounted for government loans.
Debt-for-equity talks
There are three levels of Chrysler debt secured by such assets as manufacturing plants, equipment, vehicles, parts and real estate. The first level, valued by Chrysler at $6.9 billion, was borrowed from the banks. The second is $2 billion borrowed from Daimler ($1.5 billion) and Cerberus ($500 million). The third is the $4.3 billion in government loans committed in December and January.
If Chrysler were to file for bankruptcy, the banks would be first in line to sell assets, followed by Cerberus and Daimler, and finally the federal government.
"This is the worst possible time to be selling an auto plant," said Shelly Lombard, a credit analyst with Gimme Credit in New York.
Chrysler, Fiat and President Barack Obama's auto task force are working hard to avoid that outcome. To succeed, they must secure breakthrough agreements with the banks and the UAW. Then, the task force has said it would release up to $6 billion more to fund Chrysler's operations.
Unlike GM, which is dealing primarily with bondholders, Chrysler's debt is owed to banks and the government. Some of the bank loans have been sold to hedge funds and other investors. "It's hard to know who bought what, even with bonds, and it's harder still with bank loans," Lombard said.
One of the banks likely will act as an agent for the hedge funds. Then, the task force leaders, Steven Rattner and Ron Bloom, will negotiate for a settlement that offers the banks a fraction of the loans' face value in exchange for shares in the new Chrysler.
Challenges ahead
Fiat so far has not offered cash and has said it will not assume any current debt to partner with Chrysler. While Chrysler has valued Fiat's vehicles and powertrain technology at $8 billion to $10 billion, that won't likely satisfy the banks.
"Fiat is in many ways a reasonable long-term solution," said Craig Fitzgerald of Plante & Moran. "The big question is will $6 billion more from taxpayers be enough to fund Chrysler's turnaround."
The challenge with the UAW is to find a non-cash method to cover half of $10.6 billion Chrysler owes in 2010 to the Voluntary Employee Beneficiary Association, or VEBA, trust fund. The trust was created to cover health care insurance for UAW retirees.
If Fiat doesn't offer cash or its own stock, Chrysler may offer the union stock in the new company. Such a deal would save $5.3 billion, which could be enough to satisfy Obama's demand for more concessions, and bring the UAW into partnership with banks, taxpayers, Cerberus and Fiat.....More
Chrysler and Fiat must merge or Liquidate
From The Ap
Chrysler and Fiat must merge to get more help for the Auto Task Force
Frustrated administration officials, speaking on condition of anonymity ahead of Obama's announcement, said Chrysler has been given a 30-day window to complete a proposed partnership with Italian automaker Fiat SpA. The government will offer up to $6 billion to the companies if they can negotiate a deal before time runs out. If a Chrysler-Fiat union cannot be completed, Washington plans to walk away, leaving Chrysler destined for a complete sell-off....More
Chrysler and Fiat Must Merge To Get More Help
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
Tuesday
Auto Task Force Bailout plan may be stricter than GM, Chrysler expected
By Sharon Silke Carty, USA TODAY
DETROIT — The Treasury Department will announce this week a preliminary plan to help General Motors and Chrysler that sets goals and deadlines that could be more ambitious than the companies themselves have proposed, according to a Capitol Hill staffer briefed on the plan but who wished to remain anonymous because the proposal is not yet public.
Treasury's preliminary plan also could include a bridge loan to Chrysler that's less than the $5 billion the automaker wants, the staffer said. Treasury says details still are being finalized.
A more structured version of the plan will be detailed in April, when additional loan money could become available to the two troubled companies.
The Bush administration in December set a deadline of March 31 for the automakers to prove they would be viable with the help of emergency government loans. But since then, the car market has hit the skids, and both GM and Chrysler have said they need even more money to survive.
GM and Chrysler are operating on a combined $17.4 billion in government loans approved by the Bush administration. The two automakers have asked the Obama administration for another $21.6 billion and say they need it soon.
The president's auto task force is demanding that the car companies get significant concessions first.
GM bondholders are balking at swapping two-thirds of their GM debt for stakes in the company.
Bondholders warned the government this weekend that if they can't strike a deal with the automaker, the car company might be forced into bankruptcy. A group representing bondholders says many are not willing to take stock in place of bonds because they don't believe GM will be survive long enough to make the shares valuable.
That would result in "dire consequences for the company, the tens of thousands of hard-working Americans that GM employs and the economy as a whole," bondholder advisers from investment firm Houlihan Lokey wrote.
And although the United Auto Workers, which represents U.S. hourly workers, has agreed to concessions, the Canadian Auto Workers union hasn't reached an agreement with Chrysler.
Chrysler says that if it cannot get nearly $16 an hour in wage and benefit concessions from the CAW, as well as a guarantee of $2.3 billion in loans from Canadian governments and a break on a tax dispute with Ottawa, it might have to pull out of Canada, the Associated Press reported Monday.
Canada's the source of Chrysler's U.S.-market minivans and line of big sedans that includes the Chrysler 300 and Dodge Charger.
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DETROIT — The Treasury Department will announce this week a preliminary plan to help General Motors and Chrysler that sets goals and deadlines that could be more ambitious than the companies themselves have proposed, according to a Capitol Hill staffer briefed on the plan but who wished to remain anonymous because the proposal is not yet public.
Treasury's preliminary plan also could include a bridge loan to Chrysler that's less than the $5 billion the automaker wants, the staffer said. Treasury says details still are being finalized.
A more structured version of the plan will be detailed in April, when additional loan money could become available to the two troubled companies.
The Bush administration in December set a deadline of March 31 for the automakers to prove they would be viable with the help of emergency government loans. But since then, the car market has hit the skids, and both GM and Chrysler have said they need even more money to survive.
GM and Chrysler are operating on a combined $17.4 billion in government loans approved by the Bush administration. The two automakers have asked the Obama administration for another $21.6 billion and say they need it soon.
The president's auto task force is demanding that the car companies get significant concessions first.
GM bondholders are balking at swapping two-thirds of their GM debt for stakes in the company.
Bondholders warned the government this weekend that if they can't strike a deal with the automaker, the car company might be forced into bankruptcy. A group representing bondholders says many are not willing to take stock in place of bonds because they don't believe GM will be survive long enough to make the shares valuable.
That would result in "dire consequences for the company, the tens of thousands of hard-working Americans that GM employs and the economy as a whole," bondholder advisers from investment firm Houlihan Lokey wrote.
And although the United Auto Workers, which represents U.S. hourly workers, has agreed to concessions, the Canadian Auto Workers union hasn't reached an agreement with Chrysler.
Chrysler says that if it cannot get nearly $16 an hour in wage and benefit concessions from the CAW, as well as a guarantee of $2.3 billion in loans from Canadian governments and a break on a tax dispute with Ottawa, it might have to pull out of Canada, the Associated Press reported Monday.
Canada's the source of Chrysler's U.S.-market minivans and line of big sedans that includes the Chrysler 300 and Dodge Charger.
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Wednesday
Nardelli says more aid for financing would boost Chrysler sales
Chrysler CEO Bob Nardelli called Tuesday for a second round of funding for the company's financial arm that would enable sales to customers who otherwise can't qualify for loans.
In an interview with CNBC, Nardelli also said Fiat would assume 35% of Chrysler's debt if the U.S. Treasury Department approves its proposed alliance with the Italian automaker.
Chrysler is operating with $4 billion in loans, and it's seeking $5 billion more.
But in the CNBC interview, Nardelli emphasized the effectiveness of a separate $1.5-billion loan the Treasury made to Chrysler Financial in January. Chrysler used that loan to subsidize zero-percent loans on new vehicles...More
Monday
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
Obama auto task force to come to Detroit next week
WASHINGTON -- Leaders of President Barack Obama’s auto task force will travel to Detroit next week to meet with industry and labor officials worried about an imminent collapse of several companies absent federal aid.
An administration official said final details of the trip were still being worked out, but the task force visitors will include advisers Steven Rattner and Ron Bloom.
The task force has been conducting a string of meetings over the past two weeks to gather information and assess the depth of the problems facing the industry. General Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC have said they need a total of $7 billion before the end of the month to avoid bankruptcy, and several suppliers are also on the brink.
Fiat Chief Executive Sergio Marchionne met with Rattner, Bloom and other members of the task force for two and a half hours today to discuss Fiat’s proposed alliance with Chrysler. Fiat has said it would take a 35% stake in Chrysler in return for sharing vehicle designs that could be used for several new Chrysler models.
Thursday
GM Chrysler Merger part of Chrysler Viability Plan!
Article from The Detroit Free Press-GM Chrysler Merger part of Chrysler Viability Plan!
Chrysler LLC, which is pushing forward on an alliance with Italian automaker Fiat SpA, said it believes a partnership with General Motors Corp. is still the "best option for the U.S. auto industry."
The comments came in Chrysler's restructuring plan filed late Tuesday with the Obama administration.
In the plan, Chrysler, which has already received $4 billion in federal loans, details its restructuring efforts, which include the elimination of 3,000 jobs and three vehicle models, as well as its request for $5 billion more in federal loans.
But Chrysler's plan also points to consolidation among U.S. automakers as a way to sustain the industry.
GM., which received $13.4 billion in federal loans, did not express that sentiment in its restructuring plan filed Tuesday.
Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., who has been a critic of the domestic auto industry, said it's clear that Chrysler's best option is to partner with another automaker.
"Whether it's with Fiat, or whether it makes sense to talk about GM, a merger is their best chance for survival," he said in an interview with the Free Press.
Chrysler hints at a "strong need for industry consolidation, as it notes a merger with GM would create more value than a standalone Chrysler or Fiat alliance," Barclays Capital analyst Brian Johnson said in a note to investors Wednesday.
The Auburn Hills automaker is clear that the savings from a GM-Chrysler partnership would be at least five times more than what a deal with Fiat would offer.
Chrysler has said that discussions about such a partnership, which gained steam last fall before the two automakers approached Congress for aid, were taken off the table by GM.
But as GM and Chrysler approach the government for more money, decisions about the future might not be in their hands alone. Johnson said he expects government aid will continue, "with perhaps the condition of a merger of Chrysler into GM."
However, Corker said it wasn't clear whether a GM-Chrysler pairing would make sense, given the need for GM to cut jobs, plants and brands.
"If you look at what GM is trying to do, which is simplify, does it make sense to add to it?" Corker said. "It's a question that needs to be asked in light of the changes that have occurred."
A merger between GM and Chrysler would generate at least $36 billion in cash and boost operating earnings by $40 billion, Chrysler said.
Savings would come from combining purchasing power, as well as operations for manufacturing, sales and marketing research and development and corporate staffs.
The prospect of a GM-Chrysler merger met criticism across the Midwest, where one study said the combination would cost 35,000 jobs, including as many as 25,000 jobs in Michigan alone.
Promoting a plan that would lead to thousands of job cuts could be a political landmine.
In its plans to the government Tuesday, GM said it plans to cut 47,000 jobs worldwide this year while Chrysler plans 3,000.
And the tally could rise if either automaker is forced to file for Chapter 11 protection.
"The prospect of losing 25,000 jobs in a consolidation between General Motors and Chrysler seemed outrageous in October. Right now, it seems like the best-case scenario," said Patrick Anderson, principal at the East Lansing-based Anderson Economic Group, which studied the potential merger. But Anderson said amid weak vehicle sales, it would be harder to realize all of the cost savings a merger would ordinarily deliver.
David Cole, chairman of the Center for Automotive Research in Ann Arbor, said a Chrysler-GM combination is unlikely. But as the market improves, the two companies could team up to reap at least a portion of the cost-savings a merger would have delivered.
"I'm not convinced that that's off the table forever," Cole said.
Contact JEWEL GOPWANI at 313-223-4550 or jgopwani@freepress.com. Free Press Business Writer Justin Hyde contributed.
Tuesday
Creative thinker joins Obama's auto task force
WASHINGTON — Ron Bloom, a key adviser to President Barack Obama’s new auto industry task force, brings a combination of Wall Street savvy, ties to labor unions, and a penchant for out-of-the box solutions to the government-led restructuring of General Motors and Chrysler.
Bloom, 53, a former investment banker who has worked with the United Steelworkers union since 1996, will serve as a top adviser to Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner as the Obama administration attempts to revamp two corporate giants living off billions in government loans.
General Motors and Chrysler are scheduled to submit road maps to viability today that show how they will repay $17.4 billion in promised government loans. The companies face a March 31 deadline to complete their plans, or else the government can pull the loans, essentially forcing bankruptcy.
Described as cerebral and blunt-talking, Bloom has been credited for taking creative approaches to managing the downsizing of the steel industry and creating a leaner operating structure. He also advised airline pilots in 1994 in the $4.9 billion employee buyout of UAL Corp., the parent company of United Airlines, and he worked with auto parts supplier Dana Holding Corp. to develop a health care trust fund.
“He’s not someone who brings just a conventional cookie-cutter approach. He’s going to force people to think about new ideas,” said Andy Kramer, a Washington attorney who has sat on the opposite side of the bargaining table from Bloom.
Forgoing a single “car czar,” the Obama administration chose to create a multi-agency panel led by Geithner and White House economic aide Lawrence Summers. Advising Geithner, Bloom will have the day-to-day task of working with automakers, their bondholders and labor unions to force concessions, reprising a similar role he played during the consolidation of the steel industry in the last decade.
A Harvard Business School graduate, Bloom served as a vice president with the Wall Street firm Lazard Ltd., focusing on the steel and airline industries. As a top aide to the steelworkers union’s president, he helped resolve a 10-month strike against the Wheeling-Pittsburgh Corp. in 1997, broker an agreement with Goodyear Tire in 2003, and facilitate Esmark’s successful tie-up with Wheeling-Pittsburgh in 2006.
Sunday
Chrysler official: No Fiat deal closing by Tuesday
DETROIT (AP) — The deal for Italian automaker Fiat SpA to take a 35 percent stake in Chrysler LLC will not be finished until after Chrysler submits a restructuring plan to the federal government, a Chrysler official said Friday.
But the official, who did not want to be identified because the automaker is still working on the plan it must provide to the Treasury Department by Tuesday, said Chrysler will show how it can be viable as an independent company as well as with Fiat taking a stake.
Chrysler is living on $4 billion in government loans. The restructuring plan must show how the automaker will repay the money and become viable. If the government approves the plan, Chrysler will get another $3 billion in loans. The Fiat deal is contingent upon that happening, the official said.
The automakers said last month that they have a nonbinding preliminary deal for Fiat to give its small-car technology to Chrysler in exchange for a 35 percent stake in the struggling automaker. Chrysler's current small and midsize vehicle lineup has not sold well, and it lacks a subcompact model that Fiat could provide.
Chrysler has said that Fiat's vehicle architecture and engine technology are worth billions and would allow Chrysler to get small cars to market five or six years faster than Chrysler could on its own. Fiat also would get access to Chrysler's U.S. distribution network and its emissions control and large-vehicle technology.
The official said Chrysler is still negotiating concessions from debtholders and the United Auto Workers union, even with the deadline to file the viability plan with the government only four days away. Negotiations are to continue into the weekend.
General Motors Corp., which also has received government loans to hold off a bankruptcy filing, is working on its own plan under the same deadline. GM has received $9.4 billion in loans and hopes to get another $4 billion when its plan is approved.
Under the terms of Chrysler's loans, the government set a target for the company to swap much of its debt for equity, which will severely dilute the ownership stake of its current owners, Cerberus Capital Management LP and Daimler AG.
Chrysler will negotiate into the weekend with banks that hold its secured debt to swap part of it for equity. The government also wants Chrysler to convert to equity billions in cash payments it must make to a trust that will start paying retiree health care costs next year. The government also will get equity for its loans.
Those moves, coupled with Fiat's potential 35 percent stake, could leave Cerberus and Daimler with combined ownership of less than 10 percent, according to independent auto industry analyst Erich Merkle.
"My understanding is it would be the banks and the UAW that would own the company when they're done. They would be the larger stakeholders," Merkle said.
Currently, Cerberus, a New York private equity firm, owns 80.1 percent of the struggling Auburn Hills automaker, while Daimler, Chrysler's former owner, holds 19.9 percent. Cerberus is negotiating to take the Daimler stake.
Since Chrysler is a privately held company, it's unclear just how much debt the automaker has, but officials have said it is secured debt held by banks. Chrysler is obligated to pay about $9.9 billion into the union trust under the terms of a national contract deal reached with the UAW in 2007. That payment relieves the company of a $16 billion long-term liability for retiree health care.
The union gained federal court approval for the trust and plans to invest the money so it can pay health care costs for current and future retirees. General Motors Corp. and Ford Motor Co. also agreed to similar trusts in their union contracts.
Chrysler spokeswoman Shawn Morgan would not comment other than to say that the company continues to work with its stakeholders.
Both Chrysler and GM must prove they will be able to repay government loans and achieve "positive net present value." That means that the present value of a company's expected net cash flows exceeds the initial investment that must be made in the company.
Ford has borrowed enough cash privately and says it can avoid government loans. Nearly all automakers are reporting dismal sales in what has turned out to be the worst auto sales climate in 26 years.
Chrysler Vice Chairman Jim Press said Thursday that negotiations with the UAW and banks will continue into the weekend. He said full settlements with the stakeholders don't have to be reached until March 31.
Although a Fiat deal would mean Italian company owns 35 percent of the company, it would still create American jobs, justifying the loans, Press said.
With the Fiat deal gaining momentum, Nissan Motor Co. of Japan said Friday it has suspended plans for Chrysler to produce a Nissan pickup truck and Nissan to produce a small car for Chrysler.
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