GM out of bankruptcy, pledges to be more responsive

GM out of bankruptcy, pledges to be more responsive

AP

The path is now clear for General Motors to leave bankruptcy protection in record time.

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Ownership stake

Here is the breakdown of who will own the new General Motors:
61 percent:
U.S. government
17.5 percent: United Auto Workers union through its retiree health-care trust
11.7 percent:
Canadian government
9.8 percent: bondholders from the old company
SOURCE: The Associated Press

 

DETROIT — General Motors completed an unusually quick exit from bankruptcy protection on Friday with ambitions of making money and building cars people are eager to buy.

Once the world’s largest and most powerful automaker, new GM is now leaner, cleansed of massive debt and burdensome contracts that would have sunk it without federal loans.

But GM, whose 40 days under court supervision was far shorter than anyone predicted, faces the worst auto sales slump in a quarter-century.

At a news conference, CEO Fritz Henderson said the revamped automaker will be faster and more responsive to customers than the old one. It will generate cash and repay billions in government loans ahead of a 2015 deadline.

The new company will build more cars and trucks that consumers want and launch them faster than in the past, the CEO said. GM also announced a partnership with online retailer eBay to test auctioning vehicles online.

“We recognize that we’ve been given a rare second chance at GM, and we are very grateful for that. And we appreciate the fact that we now have the tools to get the job done,“ he said.

Known for its sluggish decision-making process and bloated management ranks, GM will create a single, eight-member executive committee to speed up day-to-day decision-making, replacing two senior leadership forums.

Henderson said General Motors Corp. will streamline its bureaucratic management structure, cutting U.S. salaried employment by 20 percent, or 6,150 positions, by the end of 2009. The cuts include 450 executive jobs.

Henderson, who was promoted to chief executive in March, will run the global company and oversee its North American operations. GM’s former chief operating officer, Henderson was chosen when President Barack Obama said former CEO Rick Wagoner’s restructuring plans didn’t go far enough.

Top executives at the new company will focus on business results, new vehicles, brands and consumers.

Bob Lutz, a legendary industry executive, was “unretiring” to become a vice chairman responsible for creative elements of products, marketing and customer relationships, Henderson said. Lutz had previously planned to retire at the end of the year after more than four decades in the auto business.

Nick Reilly, who has served as GM’s Asia-Pacific president, will become executive vice president of GM’s international operations based in Shanghai, China.

The new company will focus on customers, cars and culture.

“If we don’t get this right, nothing else is going to work,“ Henderson said at GM’s Downtown Detroit headquarters. “Business as usual is over at General Motors.“

The automaker is launching a “Tell Fritz” Web site to allow owners and the public to share their concerns with senior management, and Henderson plans to go out on the road every month.

He said GM will partner with eBay in California to allow consumers to bid on vehicles just as they would in a typical eBay auction. They could also choose a “Buy it Now” option in an experiment to make car shopping easier. Dealers would still distribute the cars.

“As a culture, General Motors needs to be prepared to experiment and adjust,“ he said.

New Chairman Edward Whitacre Jr. said GM’s trip through bankruptcy protection had been extremely challenging. “There have been a lot of long hours, there have been a shuttering of plants, there have been painful layoffs.“

Whitacre cited the “strong leadership” of Henderson and the management team, giving the CEO a vote of confidence.

The company’s logo will remain blue with white underlined GM letters, although the company had considered changing the background to green to symbolize an environmental focus. GM has no plans to change the background, Henderson said.

He said the U.S. government, which owns a majority stake in GM, has vowed that it would not get involved in day-to-day decisions.

The Treasury Department released a statement Friday afternoon crediting GM’s restructuring with saving both the automaker and “tens of thousands” of American jobs.

“The hard work of charting a path to viability now rests with GM’s board and management,“ Treasury said in its statement. “But we are confident that we remain on track to ultimately see returns on these taxpayer investments.“

GM received $19 billion to $20 billion more in federal aid on Friday, the remainder of the $50 billion it will receive, Henderson said. A large part of the money will be held in escrow.

GM, in a viability plan presented to the government, said it would break even before interest and taxes next year, and be slightly above break-even for 2011 on a pretax basis.

“Sitting here today, I don’t have any reason to disbelieve those numbers,“ Henderson said, giving no details of when the company would make a net profit.

Turning a profit will not be easy. GM has piled up losses and survives only because of government loans.

Besides the U.S. government’s 61 percent controlling interest, the United Auto Workers union gets a 17.5 percent stake of the company through its retiree health care trust, and the Canadian government will control 11.7 percent. The remaining shares went to bondholders of the old company.

Concessions made by the United Auto Workers union just before the company entered bankruptcy protection have brought GM’s labor costs down to where they are fully competitive with Toyota Motor Corp., Henderson said.

The parts of GM not moving to the new company will become part of “old GM,“ a collection of assets and liabilities that will be sold to pay creditors.

___

Ken Thomas reported from Washington, D.C.. AP Auto Writer Kimberly S. Johnson and AP Business Writer Jeff Karoub in Detroit contributed to this report.

 

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Reader Reactions

Flag Comment Posted by ripsomelips on July 10, 2009 at 8:26 pm

Bush was one man. Is he guilty of something? Probably, he is human. But all the blame on one man? Too many greedy AMERICANS are to blame for too much that is wrong. Most can’t keep it in their pants. And who is lining up for that to be possible? It goes all the way down to the P.T.A. treasurer that imbezzled. Bill Clinton passed into law what became the sub-prime fleecing of the taxpayer. People’s homes are over assesed due to that. Alot of retired folks couldn’t afford the taxes on home they paid for and lost them. GM is getting what they earned. Ford get bailout money? Nope. GM, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Bank of America, and so many others are responsible for our government getting bigger. Which, our constitution says, takes away from our freedom and independence. One man responsible, impossible.

Flag Comment Posted by Opinion8d on July 10, 2009 at 7:47 pm

Our wonderful government, thank you Bush, has already used my tax dollars to bail out the likes of GM and many banks. Why in the world would I buy a product to repay a loan I didn’t authorize? It’s like paying twice for the same thing. I’m not doing it. I’m all for American jobs, but GM accepted a BUNCH of our money, laid off thousands of people ANYWAY, and still declared bankruptcy when the bailout was supposed to avoid that in the first place.

Sorry, I get taxed enough to pay for illegal criminals and career welfare folks who won’t work but keep churning out babies for us to take care of, that I refused to be taxed upon a tax for anyone. Thanks Bush. You ruined all possibility that I would buy GM ever again. And besides, the one I DID have, not too long ago was always in the shop under the warranty period, so I have recent experience. I see no incentive to buy your product and pay double the taxes for it. First, to ‘bail you out’ and second to buy your product. Nope. Ain’t happening here.

Flag Comment Posted by ripsomelips on July 10, 2009 at 7:44 pm

ziggy, most foreign cars are built in the USA by workers who settle for less. Statistics prove that low wage earners with no security in wages, health benefits,or retirement have personal problems that those with that security don’t. They take that to work and build your car. they are the hungriest of the hungry and do a great job until it all catches up with them. That’s ok, there are 10, hungry and inexperienced, people waiting to take that job and build your car. Buy foreign, and foreigners will buy you.I would say you have been lazy in your understanding. Unions are democracy at it’s best. The voice of many become one. Poor leadership will ruin anything. People pay taxes or dues and expect everything to be taken care of. Taxpayers get robbed, mamed, and murdered everyday.Pull the reigns on that high horse and smell the roses once in a while.

Flag Comment Posted by ziggy on July 10, 2009 at 5:27 pm

I’ll keep buying foreign thank you very much. Much better quality and not built by lazy union workers. GM should have been left to fail. Why should they be different from any other business with a bad business plan?

Flag Comment Posted by william23508 on July 10, 2009 at 2:31 pm

****  CALL TO ACTION ****

Ok, many of us vented our frustrations - good, we still care.

Now, take action - contact your representatives and let them know that socialism is not the answer.  If it isn’t rolled back they’ll be voted out of office. This is the only thing they care about now.

Next, vote them out anyway! Let’s encourage new candidates that understand the real America outside the DC beltway.

Flag Comment Posted by TheGoodShepherd on July 10, 2009 at 2:05 pm

No GM and Chrysler for me, thanks.  Let congress buy ‘em.

Flag Comment Posted by JB on July 10, 2009 at 1:49 pm

Like father, like son,,,, like Government like Union or is it like big Union, like big Government or……We are all now the proud parents of identical Twins. 

Ye ol apple don’t fall from da tree! U-no.

I only see the vultures benefiting from this,,, I meant lawyers just waiting for this finger pointing match to play out as partners. Partnerships end like divorce, somebody is in for a real good ol SC###ING!

The American tax payer?

Flag Comment Posted by jh28 on July 10, 2009 at 1:27 pm

I’ll buy a Honda, Toyota, or Ford assembled in America. 

A goverment run company that will be more responsive?  Hogwash.  That runs counter intuitive to everything taught in capitalism.  GM had a chance over the last 20+ years to be responsive, and they were not.

Flag Comment Posted by william23508 on July 10, 2009 at 1:20 pm

A previous writer said: “I want a car made entirely in the USA with American Parts and American Labor.“  Interesting! Many of us are now the opposite – we will by foreign.  We don’t want to support Big, Corrupt Labor Unions.  They drove the US big 3 into the ground and now they’re partial owners thanks to our - also corrupt - government leaders.  GM will never do a better job knowing that poor business decisions will be bailed out by you and me.  They should have been left on their own to survive and learn the consequences of a poor business model.  This type of socialism has always failed around the world and will fail here.  Unfortunately, you and you’re children will pay the price.

Flag Comment Posted by Anon on July 10, 2009 at 12:30 pm

This is a remarkable accomplishment.  The “really bright guys” said bankruptcy would taken at least 180 days.  GM was just too large and complex.  Guess we need to find some new really bright guys.

Eliminating the entire GM North America management layer is breathtaking. And I like the business about GM dealers auctioning off new cars on eBay.  That’s outside-the-box!

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