- Plosser Sees Perils in Fed's Massive Rescue Efforts
- BOJ Upgrades Economic View, Hopes for Export Bounce
- GMAC Receives $7.5 Billion More in Federal Aid
- AIG's Liddy Stepping Down as Chairman, CEO
- Gross: Sell-Off Driven By Fears US Could Lose AAA
- The World's Biggest Debtor Nations
- Cramer: Sell Obama’s Corporate Enemies List
- Don't Be A Big Loser, Get Correction Protection!
- US Economic Recovery May Be a Long, Slow Slog
- ARNOLD: We Will Not Tax, We Will Not Borrow
- Wall of Shame: Dow Chemicals Andrew Liveris
- Lightning Round: Wal-Mart, BlackRock, Corning and More
- Sell Block: Defending Northrop Grumman
- Cramer’s Favorite Natural Gas Stock
- Cramer: Sell Obama’s Corporate Enemies List
- Your First Move For Friday May 22nd
- Web Extra: What If U.S. Loses AAA Rating?
- Summer Stocks
Chrysler's biggest lenders and the U.S. government reached a breakthrough framework deal to cut the automakers' debt by $6.9 billion, but bankruptcy still loomed as a strong possibility to complete restructuring, officials said on Tuesday.
![]() |
Although Chrysler allies were buoyed by the development, the near-term future of the American icon hinged on several parts coming together, before Thursday's U.S. government
deadline, to prove that the company can be viable again.
"We don't want to prejudge the outcome. There is still someway to go in the negotiations, so I would not rule anything in or out," White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said after the administration confirmed the deal with most of Chrysler's primary debtholders.
Chrysler employs more than 40,000 factory and salaried employees. The company has been racing to overhaul its cost structure and secure the lone option the Obama administration believes is workable -- an alliance with Italy's Fiat.
Fiat's Chief Executive Sergio Marchionne was quoted by the president of the Canadian Auto Workers (CAW) late on Tuesday as saying that Chrysler would likely enter Chapter 11 bankruptcy for a period.
"There's still a lot of work that needs to be done," the CAW's Ken Lewenza paraphrased Marchionne as saying. U.S. officials, including Sen. Carl Levin of Michigan, told Reuters that a bankruptcy filing, if needed, would be launched with survival in mind.
"If they do go into bankruptcy, it would really be in and out," Levin said in Washington.
One source with senior-level knowledge of the Chrysler restructuring said that a surgical bankruptcy could be a way, for instance, to address any "recalcitrant" lenders.
Possibility Of Liquidation Fades
Brian Johnson, an analyst with Barclays Capital, said it was becoming "increasingly clear that Chrysler will be restructured and avoid liquidation."
Johnson said that would leave General Motors and Ford Motor less opportunity to gain any of Chrysler's market share, but, he said, parts suppliers would benefit.
The deal reached with major banks late on Monday would wipe out $6.9 billion in Chrysler debt in exchange for $2 billion in cash but no equity in a new company, according to the source.
Chrysler's more than 40 lenders were performing due diligence on the terms, another source with knowledge of the banks' review said.
Shares of GM [GM
Loading...
()
], also trying to avoid bankruptcy under a government-supervised restructuring, closed down 11.3 percent at $1.81 on the New York Stock Exchange. Shares of Ford [F
Loading...
()
], which has not sought government assistance, closed up 1.6 percent at $5.19. Chrysler is privately controlled by Cerberus Capital Management.
Further details on the high-stakes Chrysler debt restructuring deal were not immediately available. Chrysler declined to comment and representatives for the lenders could not be reached for comment.
U.S. Rep. Gary Peters, whose Michigan congressional district is home to Chrysler's headquarters, urged the debt holders to accept the deal. "The remaining debt holders should
understand that this deal is better than what they could expect in bankruptcy," he said.
The committee of Chrysler's lenders including JPMorgan Chase , Goldman Sachs [GS
Loading...
()
], Morgan Stanley [MS
Loading...
()
] and Citigroup [C
Loading...
()
].
The development with lenders came after a weekend agreement between Chrysler and the United Auto Workers to modify the union's labor contract and reduce the amount of money Chrysler would need to contribute to a retiree healthcare trust.
The UAW would end up owning 55 percent of the automaker under the concessionary contract. Members must vote on it by Wednesday night. The CAW ratified a deal with Chrysler last the weekend.
Fiat would "eventually own" 35 percent of Chrysler stock, according to a UAW document distributed to Chrysler hourly workers, if the alliance was consummated.
Fiat's deal with Chrysler would be decided close to the Thursday deadline, Fiat Vice Chairman John Elkann said on Tuesday.
Chrysler has been kept afloat with $4 billion in federal loans since the start of the year and could get another $500 million to complete its restructuring. It is expected the government would provide any bankruptcy financing.
GM has received $15 billion in government subsidies and could tap another $3 billion before its June 1 deadline to prove it can survive on its own.








