BEIJING, Dec. 5 -- General Motors Corp and Chrysler
LLC executives are considering accepting a pre-arranged bankruptcy as the
last-resort price of getting a multibillion-dollar government bailout, said a
person familiar with their internal discussions.
Auto executives have warned bankruptcy would lead to
liquidation as customers abandoned the companies. Staff for three members of
Congress have asked restructuring experts if a pre-arranged bankruptcy -
negotiated with workers, creditors and lenders - could be used to reorganize the
industry without liquidation, a person familiar with that matter said.
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Leaders of the U.S. automotive industry
testify at a hearing held by the House Financial Services Committee on
Capitol Hill in Washington November 19, 2008. From left are General Motors
CEO Richard Wagoner, Chrysler Chairman and CEO Robert Nardelli and Ford
president and CEO Alan Mulally.(Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
"It's essential for Congress to do due diligence on
bankruptcy as an option so it gets a clear sense from independent people what
the risks and possibilities are," said Alan Gover of White & Case, who has
been lead lawyer in 60 billion U.S. dollars of corporate-debt restructurings.
Many solutions to the automakers' financial problems
are on the table in discussions in Washington and around the country among
company officials, lenders, union officials and other interested parties, the
person briefed on internal talks said.
Negotiations are splintered among small groups,
making it unlikely a proposed solution such as bankruptcy would emerge until
next week at the earliest, the person said.
Publicly GM Chief Executive Officer Rick Wagoner has
said bankruptcy would mean liquidation because customers would refuse to buy
cars from a company that might not be able to back warranties or supply parts.
Bankruptcy is "way down the list of options", GM board member George Fisher
said. GM spokesman Tony Cervone had no additional comment.
Chrysler spokeswoman Shawn Morgan didn't have an
immediate comment.
GM and Chrysler told Congress on Dec 2 that they need
11 billion dollars in government loans just to survive the year as the auto
industry slump deepens. To get the money, the companies agreed to slash
payrolls, shed brands and shrink dealerships. Bankruptcy was not part of their
plans.
GM, Chrysler and Ford Motor Co asked for a
34-billion-dollar bailout package, about a third larger than the $25
billion Energy Department loan program the White House has previously supported
to finance more fuel-efficient cars. Democrats in Congress, led by House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi, pledged to keep carmakers out of bankruptcy.
The Democrats' goal of preserving a U.S. auto
industry is not doable without a bankruptcy, said Lynn LoPucki, who teaches
bankruptcy law at Harvard University and the University of California at Los
Angeles.
"A workout requires everybody's agreement," he said.
"If I own bonds, GM can't force me to take less than 100 cents on the dollar
outside of bankruptcy court. Bankruptcy is the only thing that can work because
GM and the government need the ability to force people to go along with the
plan. Paying everyone in full is prohibitively expensive."
About 77 percent of billion-dollar companies survive
bankruptcy, according to LoPucki's database, while the others sell their
business.
"Million-dollar companies rarely go into bankruptcy
and liquidate piecemeal," he said.
The government could guarantee the warranties given
to consumers on cars bought from a bankrupt automaker, said Mark Bane, a
bankruptcy lawyer with Ropes & Gray in New York. Government money could also
"ensure that parts suppliers will be paid", he said.
Less government money would be needed in a
prepackaged bankruptcy, which might last only two months, compared with two
years or more for a regular bankruptcy, according to Bane. In a prepack
restructuring, an automaker would go into court after reaching agreement with
lenders, workers and suppliers on what each would give up and on the business
plan to be followed.
Government aid might be needed only for the period
when the company was gaining consent from its constituencies - which might take
as long as six to 12 months, Bane said.
President-elect Barack Obama said lawmakers were
right to demand that US automakers provide a plan to sustain their businesses
before getting federal aid and that their latest efforts represent "a more
serious set" of proposals than earlier ones.
Any assistance must be "based on realistic
assessments of what the auto market is going to be and a realistic plan for how
we're going to make these companies viable over the long term", Obama said.
A representative of Obama's team earlier contacted at
least one bankruptcy-law firm to say Daniel Tarullo, a professor at Georgetown
University's law school who heads Obama's economic policy working group, would
call to discuss the workings of a so-called prepack, according to this person.
(Source: China Daily/Agencies)