December 21, 2024

DealBook: U.S. to Sell Stake in G.M. in 15 Months as Bailout Winds Down

A General Motors plant in Hamtramck, Mich.Rebecca Cook/ReutersA General Motors plant in Hamtramck, Mich.

12:59 p.m. | Updated

The Treasury Department said on Wednesday that it planned to sell off its entire 32 percent stake in General Motors within 15 months, eliminating another reminder of the bailouts precipitated by the financial crash of 2008.

The news comes a week after the Obama administration completely sold off its entire holdings in the American International Group, one of the most controversial rescues of the market crisis.

According to a plan outlined on Wednesday, the Treasury Department will sell a little less than half of its stake, or 200 million shares, back to General Motors for $5.5 billion by year end. The purchase price of $27.50 is about 8 percent higher than the car maker’s closing price on Tuesday.

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The Treasury Department will then sell its remaining 300.1 million shares within the next year to 15 months, depending on market conditions. Those sales could be through stock offerings or other means.

“This announcement is an important step in bringing closure to the successful auto industry rescue, it further removes the perception of government ownership of G.M. among customers, and it demonstrates confidence in G.M.’s progress and our future,” Dan Akerson, the car maker’s chairman and chief executive, said in a statement.

The Obama administration has moved quickly in the past few months to unwind some of the most contentious bailouts struck in recent years.

General Motors

It stepped in and helped rescue both G.M. and Chrysler in the middle of 2009, as the two American car makers struggled to survive amid the economic downturn. Hoping to forestall a liquidation that the government said would more than 1 million of jobs, the Treasury Department provided financing to the two car makers and to Ally Financial, G.M.’s former financing arm.

Ultimately, the administration invested about $49.5 billion in G.M., helping guide the company through a relatively quick Chapter 11 filing that shed an enormous amount of its debt load. It re-emerged as a public company in late 2010.

Since then, it has performed fairly well, having reported rising annual profits for the past two years. The company’s health has improved to the point that it is growing parts of its business, notably by creating a new internal lending arm with two acquisitions worth $7.7 billion.

G.M. said that its strong balance sheet — with about $32 billion in cash and equivalents as of Sept. 30 — paved the way for the latest stock buyback.

The Obama administration and G.M. have repeatedly emphasized the need to restoring the company as a fully private enterprise, worried that the taxpayer-financed bailout might hurt its ability to compete in the market place. Indeed, G.M. initially garnered the nickname “Government Motors” after word of its impending bailout emerged.

“The government should not be in the business of owning stakes in private companies for an indefinite period of time,” Timothy G. Massad, the Treasury Department’s assistant secretary for financial stability, said in a statement. “Moving to exit our investment in G.M. within the next 12 to 15 months is consistent with our dual goals of winding down TARP as soon as practicable and protecting taxpayer interests.”

The Treasury Department has already divested its stake in Chrysler, selling it last year to Fiat, the Italian car maker that had been a crucial ally during the American company’s bankruptcy.

The government still owns about 74 percent of Ally, though it has recovered about $5.9 billion of its investment in the lender.

Unlike the A.I.G. rescue, however, the government’s wind-down of its G.M. bailout is expected to lose money. The Treasury Department’s break-even pricepoint is generally estimated at about $53 a share, following the car maker’s I.P.O.

But the Treasury Department has long argued that the auto makers’ bailout was always expected to be unprofitable, offset by both the A.I.G. rescue and the bank recapitalization program.

Shares in G.M. were up nearly 8 percent in midday trading, at $27.52.

At least one of G.M.’s more prominent investors approved of the plan: David Einhorn, the head of Greenlight Capital, who has called the car maker an underappreciated “ugly duckling” that has shown signs of recovery.

Mr. Einhorn, whose firm owned a 1.4 percent stake in the company as of Sept. 29, said in a statement: “We applaud G.M. management for unlocking shareholder value by releasing excess capital and beginning a resolution of the government stake overhang.”

Article source: http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2012/12/19/treasury-to-sell-g-m-stake-within-15-months/?partner=rss&emc=rss

DealBook: G.M. to Buy Back Shares From U.S.

A General Motors plant in Hamtramck, Mich.Rebecca Cook/ReutersA General Motors plant in Hamtramck, Mich.

10:04 a.m. | Updated

The Treasury Department said on Wednesday that it planned to sell off its entire 32 percent stake in General Motors within 15 months, eliminating another reminder of the bailouts precipitated by the financial crash of 2008.

The news comes a week after the Obama administration completely sold off its entire holdings in the American International Group, one of the most controversial rescues of the market crisis.

According to a plan outlined on Wednesday, the Treasury Department will sell a little less than half of its stake, or 200 million shares, back to General Motors for $5.5 billion by year end. The purchase price of $27.50 is about 8 percent higher than the car maker’s closing price on Tuesday.

Related Links

The Treasury Department will then sell its remaining 300.1 million shares within the next year to 15 months, depending on market conditions. Those sales could be through stock offerings or other means.

“This announcement is an important step in bringing closure to the successful auto industry rescue, it further removes the perception of government ownership of G.M. among customers, and it demonstrates confidence in G.M.’s progress and our future,” Dan Akerson, the car maker’s chairman and chief executive, said in a statement.

The Obama administration has moved quickly in the past few months to unwind some of the most contentious bailouts struck in recent years.

General Motors

It stepped in and helped rescue both G.M. and Chrysler in the middle of 2009, as the two American car makers struggled to survive amid the economic downturn. Hoping to forestall a liquidation that the government said would more than 1 million of jobs, the Treasury Department provided financing to the two car makers and to Ally Financial, G.M.’s former financing arm.

Ultimately, the administration invested about $49.5 billion in G.M., helping guide the company through a relatively quick Chapter 11 filing that shed an enormous amount of its debt load. It re-emerged as a public company in late 2010.

Since then, it has performed fairly well, having reported rising annual profits for the past two years. The company’s health has improved to the point that it is growing parts of its business, notably by creating a new internal lending arm with two acquisitions worth $7.7 billion.

G.M. said that its strong balance sheet — with about $32 billion in cash and equivalents as of Sept. 30 — paved the way for the latest stock buyback.

The Obama administration and G.M. have repeatedly emphasized the need to restoring the company as a fully private enterprise, worried that the taxpayer-financed bailout might hurt its ability to compete in the market place. Indeed, G.M. initially garnered the nickname “Government Motors” after word of its impending bailout emerged.

“The government should not be in the business of owning stakes in private companies for an indefinite period of time,” Timothy G. Massad, the Treasury Department’s assistant secretary for financial stability, said in a statement. “Moving to exit our investment in G.M. within the next 12 to 15 months is consistent with our dual goals of winding down TARP as soon as practicable and protecting taxpayer interests.”

The Treasury Department has already divested its stake in Chrysler, selling it last year to Fiat, the Italian car maker that had been a crucial ally during the American company’s bankruptcy.

The government still owns about 74 percent of Ally, though it has recovered about $5.9 billion of its investment in the lender.

Unlike the A.I.G. rescue, however, the government’s wind-down of its G.M. bailout is expected to lose money. The Treasury Department’s break-even pricepoint is generally estimated at about $53 a share, following the car maker’s I.P.O.

But the Treasury Department has long argued that the auto makers’ bailout was always expected to be unprofitable, offset by both the A.I.G. rescue and the bank recapitalization program.

Shares in G.M. were up 5.7 percent in early morning trading, at $26.93.

Article source: http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2012/12/19/treasury-to-sell-g-m-stake-within-15-months/?partner=rss&emc=rss

Sovereign Debt Worries Flare Again in Europe

European stocks were sagging even before a disappointing U.S. jobs report added to concerns about the global economy, dragged lower by those companies most tied to growth like car makers, banks and insurers.

Yields on 10-year Italian bonds rose almost a tenth of a percentage point to 5.21 percent — well above the 5 percent level that is considered to be the top rate desired by policy makers.

The yield on Spain’s 10-year securities climbed slightly to 5.06 percent, despite passage in the lower house of the Spanish Parliament on Friday of an amendment that will enshrine stricter budgetary discipline in the Constitution.

The E.C.B. on Aug. 8 began the extraordinary step of buying Italian and Spanish debt to help calm markets after 10-year rates had spiked to around the 6 percent level.

David Schnautz, interest rate strategist at Commerzbank in London, said many investors had chosen to use the E.C.B.’s recent bond buying program to offload those bonds, and that was causing yields to drift up now.

“There’s still no genuine investor demand for Spanish and Italian government bonds,” he said.

Sentiment was hit after the team of European and International Monetary Fund officials pulled out of Athens early as they apparently disagreed over the country’s deficit figures and how to make up for a growing budget shortfall.

The mission had been sent to determine whether Greece would meet the conditions for the next tranche of emergency loans, due in September.

The representatives of the European Commission, the European Central Bank and the I.M.F. said in a statement that “good progress” had been made, but that they wanted to allow time for the Greek government to complete technical work on the 2012 budget and reforms.

The delegates, who had been scheduled to leave next week, said they would return to Athens by mid-September, “when we expect the Greek authorities to have completed the technical work, to continue discussions on policies needed to complete the review.”

An initial loan package, agreed to last year, has since been supplemented by a second bailout deal that was hammered out in Brussels in July, but which now hangs in the balance amid demands by some euro zone countries for guarantees from Greece in the form of collateral. Without that fresh aid, Athens could default on its obligations.

The Greek Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos denied that there was a rift with the auditors over the country’s ability to meet deficit reduction targets set by the foreign creditors.

The minister said at a news conference that talks were continuing with auditors in “a very friendly and constructive climate,” and that he expected the team back on Sept. 14 for a second phase once Athens had finalized a draft of the national budget for 2012.

Greek officials had not previously suggested that there would be a break in negotiations with the inspectors, whose previous audits have lasted two weeks.

One issue that dominated talks, which concluded in the early hours of Friday morning, was a deeper-than-expected recession in Greece that would necessitate “some additional elaboration to ensure there is no divergence” from deficit reduction targets, Mr. Venizelos said.

A European official, speaking on condition of anonymity because the talks were confidential, said that without additional information, there was a risk that some euro zone countries might not agree to releasing the next tranche.

Mr. Venizelos also said that Greece’s economy was expected to contract by “up to 5 percent” but would not give a figure for the Greek budget deficit, broadly expected to overshoot a deficit target of 7.6 percent for 2011 by up to one percentage point.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/03/business/global/sovereign-debt-worries-flare-again-in-europe.html?partner=rss&emc=rss