Obbligazioni societarie GM, Ford, Chrysler: il 3D dell'automotive USA (2 lettori)

paologorgo

Chapter 11
una domanda tecnica: immagino che chi dichiara alla banca di aderire allo swap veda la sua posizione "congelata" (mica puoi aderire e poi le vendi ad uno che vuole fare l'hold out...)

come funziona?
 

paologorgo

Chapter 11
For those holding out hope that GM (GM) and Chrysler will survive, Brandon Matthews says today's decision to shutter hundreds of Chrysler and up to a thousand GM dealerships is the final nail in the coffin.

"Chrysler will not be required (per bankruptcy law) to buy back the vehicles or tools and parts from rejected dealers," it says in a memo sent to dealers this morning, 789 of which (25%) will be eliminated. Not long ago Chrysler pleaded with dealers to help out by buying more cars. Hopefully, most of them turned a deaf ear.

S.A.
 

yellow

Forumer attivo
I grandi investitori Istituzionali che detengono Bond GM e che si sono coperti con i CDS " non hanno ALCUN interesse " a favorire il miserrimo swap ( ci rimetterebbero un sacco di soldi )
 

paologorgo

Chapter 11
GM says Chrysler-like sale most likely form of bankruptcy

DETROIT, May 14 (Reuters) - General Motors Corp (GM.N) on Thursday said that if it files for bankruptcy it would most likely pursue a quick sale of its best assets out of court protection similar to the process now reshaping Chrysler LLC.
The disclosure, which came in a filing for U.S. securities regulators, marked the first time that GM said it would most likely pursue the same legal strategy that Chrysler is using under federal oversight to slash its debt and dealerships.
GM faces a June 1 deadline to restructure its bond debt and reach a sweeping new deal with its major union.
The automaker repeated in its Thursday filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission that it expected to file for bankruptcy if not enough of its bonds are tendered in exchange for shares by that deadline.

http://www.reuters.com/article/marketsNews/idINN1445788220090514?rpc=44
 

paologorgo

Chapter 11
This prospectus supplement should be read in conjunction with the original prospectus. Except for the changes described herein, all other terms of the exchange offers remain the same.

This prospectus supplement includes changes made to the original prospectus to, among other things:

update disclosure relating to alternatives we are considering under the U.S. Bankruptcy Code;

Bankruptcy Relief

This section (which begins on the cover page of the original prospectus) is hereby amended and supplemented as follows (additions indicated in underline ):
“In the event that we do not receive prior to June 1, 2009 enough tenders of old notes, including the old Series D notes, to consummate the exchange offers, we currently expect to seek relief under the U.S. Bankruptcy Code. This relief may include (i) seeking bankruptcy court approval for the sale of most or substantially all of our assets pursuant to section 363(b) of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code to a new operating company, and a subsequent liquidation of the remaining assets in the bankruptcy case (a “363(b) Sale”) ; (ii) pursuing a plan of reorganization (where votes for the plan are solicited from certain classes of creditors prior to a bankruptcy filing) that we would seek to confirm (or “cram down”) despite the deemed rejection of the plan by the class of holders of old notes; or (iii) seeking another form of bankruptcy relief, all of which involve uncertainties, potential delays and litigation risks. We are considering these alternatives in consultation with the U.S. Department of the Treasury (the “U.S. Treasury”), our largest lender. We currently believe that if we pursue one of these alternatives, a 363(b) Sale would be the most likely, although we could pursue any of these alternatives.

If we seek bankruptcy relief, holders of old notes may receive consideration that is less than what is being offered in the exchange offers, and it is possible that such holders may receive no consideration at all for their old notes.”
 

paologorgo

Chapter 11
GM Nears Crucial Deal With UAW

By JOHN D. STOLL

General Motors Corp., under the direction of the U.S. Treasury, is near a deal that would cut its hourly labor costs by more than $1 billion a year and reduce its $20 billion pledge to the United Auto Workers to cover health-care obligations, said people familiar with the matter.
The plan is still in flux, but GM and the union could finalize terms as early as next week.
The Detroit auto maker expects to halve its remaining cash outlays for retiree health costs to about $10 billion, and supplement that contribution with a 39% equity stake in the reorganized GM, the people familiar with the matter said.
Cutting GM's health-care costs is an essential part of the "controlled bankruptcy" plan the Treasury Department is formulating for GM.
GM declined to comment on the matter. A UAW spokesman couldn't be reached.
The proposed deal, which could still fall apart, would have to be approved by the UAW's 60,000 members at GM, who are expected to face steep cuts in pay and benefits, as well as 20,000 additional layoffs.
By at least tentatively agreeing to the latest concession, the union -- which once prided itself on offering members gold-plated benefits, job security and pay increases -- is taking another big hit in hopes of saving the auto maker, which employed nearly 200,000 UAW workers just a decade ago.
In 2007, the UAW moved to protect one of its key benefits: health care for retirees. It did so by agreeing to fund a new $35 billion health plan -- known as a Voluntary Employees' Beneficiary Association -- that would assume responsibility for retiree health-care costs starting in 2010.
With UAW backing in sight, people inside the Treasury are increasingly confident they can push through a massive reorganization of the auto maker, overriding protests from its bondholders and dealers. Some GM bondholders are expected to argue in court that their interests are being trampled on, with their claims taking a back seat to those of employees.
The trust ended GM's exposure to health-care inflation by capping what it would pay in long-term health-care costs. The cap meant the UAW would eventually need to cut coverage for hundreds of thousands of retirees and their family members.
GM has already provided about $15 billion to the VEBA, but still owes $20 billion under an agreement that would have let it fund the trust over time.
The original plan was viewed as the largest UAW concession in history. The idea was to help clear long-term obligations off GM's balance sheet, and eliminate billions of dollars a year in cash outlays.
But the collapse of the U.S. auto market in 2008, and continued erosion of GM's market share, upended the company's financial assumptions, and forced the parties back to the bargaining table. People involved in the negotiations say the two sides have been able to approach an accord this time without the lengthy battles that hampered previous negotiations.
Many worries remain for union officials, say people involved in the discussions. They say that the stock GM proposes to contribute to the VEBA is illiquid and hard to value, posing a big risk for UAW members. The union had initially asked for more from Treasury officials in the negotiations, but was rebuffed.
With UAW backing in sight, people inside the Treasury are increasingly confident they can push through a massive reorganization of the auto maker, overriding protests from its bondholders and dealers. Some GM bondholders are expected to argue in court that their interests are being trampled on, with their claims taking a back seat to those of employees.
A key element in the plan is the ability to execute what the Obama administration has dubbed a "quick rinse," which would place GM under bankruptcy protection and then remove its most valuable assets from court oversight.
Treasury hopes to short-circuit protests from creditors by lining up deals before GM enters bankruptcy proceedings. In coming days GM is expected to approach secured lenders, including major banks, to renegotiate about $6 billion in debts, according to people familiar with the matter.
GM plans to ask its lenders for more time to pay its debt. It doesn't plan to ask for a significant reduction in the amount of debt it owes, said people close to the discussions.
Another critical task for the auto maker will be to persuade a bankruptcy judge that unsecured bondholders -- owed at least $27 billion -- are being treated fairly in a reorganization. GM has offered them 10% of the company's equity.
The bondholders, who say the offer is equivalent to four cents on the dollar, have fired back with a counterproposal asking for 58% of the new GM's equity, and a bigger slice than the UAW's. But administration officials, emboldened by concessions wrested from Chrysler LLC's lenders, are taking a hard line, according to people close to the Treasury.
These people say the Obama administration wants a GM bankruptcy "to be as clean as possible," but isn't "going to pay ransom to bondholders."
A steering committee representing the bondholders has had trouble persuading the administration's automotive task force to sweeten terms of a debt-for-equity swap, people attending the meetings said.
The steering committee and other bondholders expect to raise legal objections to GM's bankruptcy plan if it doesn't change the current offer, said Eric Siegert, managing director at Houlihan Lokey, which represents the steering committee.
The key to overriding bondholder challenges is whether the government can persuade a bankruptcy judge that GM is on the brink of collapse. This is known as a "melting ice cube" argument, and is often used to justify what is called a "363 sale" in bankruptcy parlance, or the immediate sale of assets whose value would likely be destroyed by a stay in bankruptcy court.
GM's bankruptcy attorneys expect to point to recent developments at Chrysler, where sales fell 48% in the month leading up to its April 30 bankruptcy filing, as evidence that GM's revenue base is akin to a melting ice cube because consumers aren't interested in buying cars from a bankrupt company, according to people working on the plan.
In a regulatory filing late Thursday, GM confirmed that it plans to sell assets to a new operating company and liquidate its remaining assets if it files for bankruptcy. The new company is expected to include brands like Chevrolet and Cadillac, and plants needed to make those products. Plants and divisions slated for closure would be sold or liquidated.
GM also told its suppliers it will make critical payments to them nearly a week before a Treasury-imposed deadline for an out-of-court restructuring. GM spokesman Dan Flores said GM will make the payments on May 28, instead of June 2, partly to support struggling car-parts makers.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124234322059721429.html?ru=yahoo#mod=yahoo_hs
 

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