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U. S. Is Said to Prepare Filing for Chrysler Bankruptcy



By MICHELINE MAYNARD and MICHAEL J. de la MERCED



Published: April 23, 2009



DETROIT — The Treasury Department is preparing a Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing for Chrysler that could come as soon as next week, people with direct knowledge of the action said Thursday.



The Treasury has an agreement in principle with the United Automobile Workers union, whose members’ pensions and retiree health care benefits would be protected as a condition of the bankruptcy filing, said these people, who asked for anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the case.



Moreover, Fiat of Italy would complete its alliance with Chrysler while the company is under bankruptcy protection.



The only major question that remains unresolved is what happens to Chrysler’s lenders, who hold $6. 9 billion in company debt. The government’s most recent offer, presented Wednesday, would give the company’s lenders about 22 cents on the dollar, or $1. 5 billion, and a 5 percent equity stake in a reorganized Chrysler. Earlier this week, a steering committee of the lenders proposed that they receive 65 cents on the dollar, or $4. 5 billion, and a 40 percent equity stake.



Officials at Chrysler and the Treasury were not immediately available for comment.



A bankruptcy filing by Chrysler would be the first among Detroit’s troubled automakers, who have been mired in a devastating sales slump since last fall. Treasury is also working with General Motors to prepare a possible bankruptcy case, and the terms of a Chrysler filing might offer a glimpse into the shape of G. M. ’s own filing.



Some analysts questioned whether the Treasury’s steps to prepare a bankruptcy case were an effort to put more pressure on lenders, with which it has exchanged proposals meant to reduce Chrysler’s debt. Chrysler faces an April 30 deadline from the Treasury, while G. M. faces a June 1 deadline in its own efforts to draft a new restructuring plan.



Under the most likely assumptions, Treasury will provide the financing that Chrysler needs to operate while under bankruptcy protection. The Canadian government is also expected to participate in backing the company.



The Globe and Mail of Toronto reported the Canadian government’s role on Thursday.



Last month, the Obama administration told Chrysler it would provide up to $6 billion in financing if Chrysler and Fiat could complete a deal by the end of this month. Fiat originally agreed to take 35 percent of Chrysler, but the stake was subsequently reduced to 20 percent. The administration said it would provide up to $6 billion in financing if the two companies agreed, on top of $4 billion in federal assistance that Chrysler has already received.



Although the two companies have been holding discussions on an out-of-court agreement, a bankruptcy case would allow Fiat to more easily select the assets of Chrysler that it wants to preserve, such as dealerships, factories and the company’s product development operations, these people said. The approach, which relies upon Section 363 of the federal bankruptcy code, is somewhat similar to what the government is planning in the case of G,M. .



Then, Chrysler could sell or jettison any assets it does not want to keep, and cancel franchise agreements with superfluous car dealers.



The U. A. W. , Chrysler and Treasury have reached agreements in principle that would protect workers’ benefits, these people said, and a similar agreement is expected to be reached as soon as this weekend with the Canadian Auto Workers union.



Once Chrysler emerges from bankruptcy protection, it would largely be owned by Fiat, the U. A. W. , the Treasury and its lenders, these people said.



Ron Gettelfinger, the U. A. W. ’s president, issued a statement on Wednesday saying that the union was “continuing to work toward an agreement that will be in the best interest of Chrysler workers, retirees and the communities where the company does business. ”



People close to the talks said Wednesday that the U. A. W. had tentatively agreed to accept Chrysler stock to finance half of the company’s $10. 6 billion obligation to the health care trust. The balance would be paid in cash over the next decade. That money presumably could come from either the Treasury, or from Chrysler’s profits, once it emerges from bankruptcy protection.



Chrysler has a $9. 3 billion pension shortfall, or 34 percent of its total liability, according to the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation. The agency said earlier this month that it would assume $2 billion of the shortfall in the event Chrysler terminates its pension plans.



If that happened, retirees would receive sharply lower benefits than they normally would expect. But Chrysler is not obligated to terminate its pension plans while in bankruptcy, particularly if it received federal assistance to fund them.



It was not clear Thursday where Chrysler would file its bankruptcy case. On Wednesday, Mike Cox, the attorney general of Michigan, urged General Motors and Chrysler to consider filing in the state, rather than Delaware or New York. He said a locally administered case would be more convenient for creditors in Michigan.



Micheline Maynard reported from Detroit and Michael J. de la Merced from New York. Bill Vlasic contributed reporting.
 
I remember when the US was a nation of free enterprise where individuals owned companies and made business decisions in their own best interests.

Why doesn't the UAW trade their pension and healthcare benefit accounts for 100% ownership of Chrysler leaving Fiat and the new socialist government out? I never heard a labor union member speak who didn't know far more about running a company than management. The UAW could return Chrysler to profitability within 90 days by simply implementing all their great knowledge and wisdom. At the same time they could reduce their workweek to 20 days per week, provide 60 vacation days per year, prohibit working nights, weekends, holidays, or during bowling tournaments or hunting season, hire millions more workers, implement new union workrules, etc. It could become a socialist worker's paradise.
 
and they wonder why g. m. and chrysler is in a finacial crises. i would turn over the retirement obligations to the union. paid for with higher union dues. reduce wage accross the board to $15-25 depending on the job. exec's get no more than 20% more than floor workers. medical benifits can be handled by the union, unless its job related.

between retirement and medical you cut employee cost by over 45%.

then g. m. and chrysler could afford to build the toybox cars the epa and greens want.

right now with the overhead the toybox cars are to expensive or the company takes a loss.

cc
 
I remember when the US was a nation of free enterprise where individuals owned companies and made business decisions in their own best interests.



Ah, the good old days.



I wonder what will happen when the government controls the warranty process on GM and Chrysler vehicles... it'll take an act of congress to get an alternator replaced (literally!).



Ryan
 
In simple terms, When I decided to Purchase my 2008 Charger the Lifetime Warranty was appealing. . So if for the Next Three Years (Payments) if so much as the Warranty repairs go, if they do NOT Honor the Warranty, then I will not Honor My Purchase agreement with Chrysler Finical. . The UAW and the greedy Corpate can take that to the Dirt.
 
Let's be a little more upbeat here. This isn't any more socialist than when Iacoca took
over the last time they were on their back. He paid the loans off early and everything
was fine, for a couple decades. Considering the depression we're in, it's amazing they
might survive at all.
 
I found it interesting, I read this morning that Chrysler financial will be eliminated. GMAC will be taking over.
 
Let's be a little more upbeat here. This isn't any more socialist than when Iacoca took

over the last time they were on their back. He paid the loans off early and everything

was fine, for a couple decades. Considering the depression we're in, it's amazing they

might survive at all.



Upbeat? the wave of poor decision making couple with the corporate greed and entitlement labor will never recover? These are just tremors before the big quake. This Generation has already rob us of natural selection. . The US Government (Now in Power) is not and has not and does not know how to make good decision concerning the general public, it is motivated by the masses or the entitlement generation that NOW exists, it has produce a bumper crop of self interest, self honoring and demoralize state.
 
Iacoca used federal loans, not bail out money. none of the companies should receive bail outs. if they need money they should get loans.
chrysler and g. m. both should of gone into receivership last fall.
short term profits, instead of long term goals ran the board rooms.
mercedes did to chrysler, like amf did to harley-davidson.
then we wonder why chrysler is having problems.
cc
 
Iacoca used federal loans, not bail out money. none of the companies should receive bail outs. if they need money they should get loans. ...



To be more accurate, Chrysler Corp. received private/commercial loans that were guaranteed by the federal government; the guarantee was akin to those associated with federally guaranteed student loans.
 
quite true
thanks for expanding on my comment.
lee iacoca was offered a presidential candidacy by the republican party and he refused.
citing that the government was to messed up for one person to fix.
cc
 
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