'automakers'에 해당되는 글 12건

  1. 2008.11.12 Pelosi supports new help for ailing US automakers by CEOinIRVINE
  2. 2008.11.08 Automakers to Washington: It's Crunch Time by CEOinIRVINE
WASHINGTON -

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi called for "emergency and limited financial assistance" for the battered auto industry on Tuesday and urged the outgoing Bush administration to join lawmakers in reaching a quick compromise.

Four days after dismal financial reports from General Motors Corp. (nyse: GM - news - people ) and Ford Motor Co. (nyse: F - news - people ), Pelosi backed legislation to make the automakers eligible for help under the $700 billion bailout measure that cleared Congress in October.

In a written statement, the California Democrat said the aid was needed "in order to prevent the failure of one or more of the major American automobile manufacturers, which would have a devastating impact on our economy, particularly on the men and women who work in that industry."

"Congress and the Bush administration must take immediate action," she added. Administration officials have concluded that the bailout bill that passed earlier does not permit loans to the auto industry, but lawmakers are expected to return to the Capitol for a brief postelection session beginning next week.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., also supports help for the industry, and he issued a statement saying Democrats were "determined to pass legislation that will save the jobs of millions" as part of a postelection session.

"This will only get done if President Bush and Senate Republicans work with us in a bipartisan fashion, and I am confident they will do what is right for our economy," he said.

The plight of the industry has drawn attention from the White House and the incoming Obama administration in recent days, as well as among lawmakers.

Last week, President-elect Obama prodded the Bush administration to do more to help the industry, and on Monday, aides said he raised the issue with President Bush in an Oval Office conversation meant to underscore a smooth transition of power.

Officials familiar with the conversation said the president replied he was open to the idea.

Before adjourning for the elections, Congress passed legislation providing for $25 billion in government-backed loans to the automakers to prod them to retool their factories to make more efficient vehicles.

Since then, executives from GM, Ford and Chrysler LLC and officials in the United Autoworkers union have called for more than that to avert a possible collapse of one of the nation's most basic industries, including a $25 billion loan to help keep the companies afloat and $25 billion more to help cover future health care payments for about 780,000 retirees and their dependents.

GM and Ford reported last week that they spent down their cash reserves by a combined $14.6 billion in the past three months. Ford said it would slash more than 2,000 white collar jobs.

Pelosi's statement did not specify how large an aid package she prefers.

Instead, she said she had asked Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, to draft legislation.

A companion effort is under way in the Senate.

The Senate is scheduled to meet next week in a postelection session, but until Pelosi issued her statement, it was not clear the House would follow suit.

The House already has passed legislation to provide additional unemployment insurance benefits for some of the growing ranks of the nation's jobless, as well as a separate measure to stimulate the economy.

That meant the Senate could have passed either or both bills and sent them to the White House for Bush's signature without further action by the House.

Pelosi's announcement changed that, and raised the possibility of a postelection session that covers more areas.

The Bush administration, for example, has said that enactment of a free trade agreement with Colombia is its top priority in Congress.

Many Democrats oppose the proposed agreement as written. But it is unclear what, if any, compromise might be possible that would allow auto assistance and a trade agreement to be the last major measures signed into law by the outgoing president.

In her statement, Pelosi said any assistance to the industry should include limits on executive compensation, rigorous government review authority and other taxpayer protections.

Copyright 2008 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed

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Automakers to Washington: It's Crunch Time

Auto executives tell congressional leaders millions of jobs could be lost if the Detroit Three don't get billions of federal dollars

http://images.businessweek.com/story/08/600/1107_wagoner.jpg

Richard Wagoner, chairman and CEO of General Motors (R), listens during a panel on Capitol Hill Sept. 12 Brendan Smialowski/Getty Images

A day before General Motors (GM) was expected to report a nearly $4 billion loss for its latest quarter, top executives of GM, Ford (F), Chrysler, and the United Auto Workers union came to Washington to press their case for at least $25 billion in federal loans. Without the help, the car companies argued, they may not survive 2009.

General Motors has been trying to convince congressional leaders to include the auto companies in the parade of industries—including banking and insurance—being bailed out through the Treasury Dept.'s $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Plan. Up to now, GM has been basing its argument for the cash in part on its acquiring the troubled Chrysler. But in the Washington meetings on Nov. 6, car-industry executives focused on simply getting the three companies through the next year with enough cash to stay in business.

To do that, industry sources say, the car companies want access to the Federal Reserve Board's discount lending window, as well as a second federal loan package of up to $25 billion. "The acquisition of Chrysler became a distraction to the pressing need to simply shore up the companies from reaching a potentially disastrous level early next year," said one high-ranking auto executive with knowledge of a meeting between auto executives and Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.).

Bad Quarter Expected

Detroit's new thrust is the clearest sign yet of just how desperate its situation has become. In October, GM's sales fell a staggering 45% from the same month a year earlier. Ford's sales were down 30%, and Chrysler's fell 36%. Overall, the industry suffered its worst sales month since 1983 (BusinessWeek.com, 11/3/08).

On Friday, Nov. 7, analysts expect GM and Ford to report dismal earnings for the third quarter. GM is burning through cash and has said it plans to announce more cost cuts. It warned on Wednesday that the industry's prospects are dwindling fast due to the "near-collapse" in demand for cars, which the industry blames in part on the continuing global credit crunch. Ford shares closed Thursday down 5.3%, to 1.98, on the New York Stock Exchange. GM fell 13.7%, to 4.80.

Detroit executives stress that they're pushing forward with the alternative-fuel technologies that the U.S. Energy Dept. already is planning to fund with a $25 billion loan. But they maintain that plunging sales have changed the game and made new federal investment necessary.

Concern About Government Liability

"We are absolutely committed to delivering safe, affordable, quality, fuel-efficient vehicles that Americans want and value," said Alan Mulally, Ford's CEO, in a prepared statement late Thursday. "Despite our progress, the economy and the credit crisis are significant challenges that are dramatically affecting consumer demand for automobiles. Speaker Pelosi and [Senate] Majority Leader [Harry] Reid are seeking ways to help the auto industry given these unprecedented economic challenges. We applaud their efforts and will work together with all of our nation's leaders to continue our transformation to greater fuel-efficiency and to help protect jobs."

Several members of Congress have expressed concern over having the federal government serve as an investment banker to help GM acquire Chrysler, thus triggering massive layoffs. That's why lobbying efforts are now focused on the argument of saving jobs, and potentially saving the government billions more down the road in the form of money it won't have to pay to bail out the auto companies' pension and health-care obligations.




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