Obbligazioni societarie GM, Ford, Chrysler: il 3D dell'automotive USA (4 lettori)

paologorgo

Chapter 11

paologorgo

Chapter 11
i primi conti per il taxpayer americano... ;) :-o

Chrysler filed with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court a Joint Plan of Liquidation and related Disclosure Statement. The Disclosure Statement asserts, “In these Chapter 11 Cases, the Plan contemplates the liquidation of each of the Debtors and therefore is referred to as a ‘plan of liquidation.’ The primary objectives of the Plan are to: (1) maximize the value of the ultimate recoveries to all creditor groups on a fair and equitable basis; (2) settle, compromise or otherwise dispose of certain Claims and Interests on terms that the Debtors believe to be fair and reasonable and in the best interests of the Debtors’ respective Estates and creditors; (3) implement agreements with the Government DIP Lenders and the First Lien Lenders…that provide for, among other things, (a) the funding of the winddown of the Debtors’ Estates, (b) the transfer of collateral or the proceeds of collateral to, as applicable, the Government DIP Lenders or the First Lien Lenders that hold security interests in such collateral and (c) the funding of the Daimler Litigation…; (4) provide an opportunity for holders of Allowed General Unsecured Claims to achieve a recovery on account of such Claims, by virtue of the Government DIP Lenders’ release of their Liens on any proceeds of the Daimler Litigation…; and (5) create a Liquidation Trust to liquidate and distribute the Debtors’ remaining assets….” The Disclosure Statement further explains, “In addition, the TARP Financing Deficiency Claims of approximately $3.7 billion is a General Unsecured Claim; however, the U.S. Treasury will receive no recovery on account of such Claim pursuant to the terms of the Plan.” The Court scheduled a January 21, 2010 hearing to consider the Disclosure Statement.
 

paologorgo

Chapter 11
GM taps Microsoft CFO to run finances - Yahoo! Finance

DETROIT (AP) -- General Motors Co. has hired the chief financial officer of Microsoft Corp. to run its troubled finance operations, tapping a cost-cutter who also is a potential candidate for CEO.
Chris Liddell will become CFO starting next year and report directly to interim CEO Ed Whitacre Jr., who is himself a newcomer to the automaker. The 51-year-old Liddell is the first permanent top manager hired from outside the company since it left bankruptcy protection in July. Whitacre, who says he wants to shake up GM's slow and rigid culture, has pushed out top executives and promoted younger managers in recent weeks.
Liddell replaces GM CFO Ray Young, who is transferring to China. The former head of the government's autos task force wrote that GM had the weakest finance operation that task force members had seen in a major company.
Liddell, a former investment banker and Oxford University graduate, brings to GM a reputation for holding down costs and stockpiling cash from his tenure with Microsoft, which last month announced he was stepping down.
In announcing his departure, Microsoft said he was leaving to pursue jobs above the level of CFO.
The New Zealand native is a likely candidate for the top position at GM and could be taking the CFO job to get to know the automotive business, management experts say.
Whitacre, who is 68 and the former head of AT&T Inc., became interim CEO earlier this month but says he doesn't want the job.
Jeffrey A. Sonnenfeld, a professor at the Yale School of Management, says it's hard to imagine Liddell leaving a strong global icon like Microsoft for an "eroded pillar of an old economy" without being dangled an opportunity to run it.
GM spokesman Chris Preuss says he does not know if Liddell is a candidate for the top job. He also says he does not know Liddell's pay package, which could be controlled by government-imposed pay limits.
Liddell led an effort this year to slice $3 billion in costs at Microsoft after it became clear the technology industry would not be immune from the effects of the economic meltdown. The plan included the software company's first mass layoffs, wage freezes as well as cuts to employee travel and other expenses.
Liddell also made stockpiling cash a priority. In the most recent quarter, Microsoft's cash and short-term investments that could be quickly converted to cash jumped to $36.7 billion from $31.4 billion three months earlier.
He joined Microsoft in 2005, and during his tenure, the Redmond, Wash.-based company remained an avid acquirer of smaller companies, including a $6 billion takeover of Internet advertising technology provider aQuantive Inc. He was also on board when Microsoft made its $47.5 billion bid for Yahoo Inc. in 2008.
"We're also looking to his experience and insights in corporate strategy as a member of the senior leadership team in helping our restructuring efforts," Whitacre said in the statement.
Liddell came to Microsoft after serving in the same role at International Paper Co., a global paper and packaging manufacturer and distributor.
Before IP, he had CEO experience as the top executive of Carter Holt Harvey Ltd., then New Zealand's second-largest listed company. He also was managing director and joint CEO for CS First Boston NZ Ltd.
Peter Misek, an analyst at Canaccord Adams, says Liddell has both higher ambitions and higher skills that could propel him beyond the CFO level.
"I suspect, I don't know, that the GM challenge is enormous, and if he does a great job there, it will position him well" for the CEO role, Misek says.
Liddell was able to do what many executives could not at Microsoft: change a culture of limitless growth.
"Microsoft wasn't designed for expense containment," Misek says.
Liddell holds an engineering degree with honors from the University of Auckland, New Zealand, and a Master of Philosophy degree from Oxford University in England. He also is a member of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's Advisory Committee on Improvements to Financial Reporting.
Gerald Meyers, a former chairman of American Motors Corp. who now teaches at the University of Michigan, still thinks Whitacre will take the CEO job, but says it's not out of the question that Liddell is getting a trial run.
"If his stated ambition is to be a higher level than CFO, there's really only one level above that, and that's CEO," Meyers says.
 

troppidebiti

Forumer storico
Paolo alla resa dei conti possiamo dire che c' è stata una sottovalutazione degli asset gm?

come interpretare le fitte vendite a 0,30?:lol::lol::lol:



 

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Yunus80

Del PIG non si butta nulla
Il tuo grafico non tiene conto del rateo, che negli ultimi giorni valeva circa il 60.000% del valore del titolo... :-o :lol:
 

troppidebiti

Forumer storico
un pò di cassa non fa mai male

L'offerta sarebbe di 2 miliardi di dollari, meno di un terzo dell'acquisto dieci anni fa



...che tranvata altro che supermanager:rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes:
 

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