WASHINGTON(AP)
Humbled and fighting for survival, Detroit's once-mighty
automakers appealed to Congress with a retooled case for a bailout
as large as $34 billion Tuesday, pledging to slash workers, car
lines and executive pay in return for a federal lifeline. GM and
Chrysler said they needed an immediate cash infusion to last
'til New Year's, and warned they could drag the entire
industry down if they fail.
Chrysler LLC said it needed $7 billion by year's end, and
General Motors Corp. asked for a quick $4 billion as just the first
installment of as much as $18 billion to stay afloat and weather
even worse economic storms. Ford Motor Co. had a more upbeat
report, but the other two members of the U.S. Big Three painted the
direst portraits to date _ including the prospects of shuttered
factories and massive job losses _ of what could happen if Congress
doesn't quickly step in.
"Failing to act now will hurt many American families and
undermine our country's economic recovery, far outweighing the
costs related to supporting an industry that touches every district
in every state of the nation," Chrysler said.
"There isn't a Plan B," said GM Chief Operating
Officer Fritz Henderson. "Absent support, frankly, the company
just can't fund its operations."
New sales figures underscored the seriousness of the situation.
U.S. light vehicle sales at General Motors and Chrysler plunged
more than 40 percent in November, while Ford's sales dropped 31
percent, battered by an economic storm that has sent consumer
demand for new vehicles to lows not seen in decades.
Democratic leaders have said they might call Congress back next
week to pass an auto bailout _ but only if the carmakers'
blueprints show the carmakers have reasonable plans to stay viable
with the help.
Making no commitments, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.,
said Tuesday, "We want to see a commitment to the future. We
want to see a restructuring of their approach, that they have a new
business model, a new business plan." She said, "it is my
hope that we would" pass legislation to help the industry.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said he would try to
jump-start debate Monday on an auto bailout measure. "We have
to make sure we do everything we can to take care of the auto
industry," he said. "I hope we can do
something."
Nervous investors sent the Dow Jones industrials bouncing up and
down all day, though they finished up 270 points, partly making up
for Monday's plunge of nearly 680.
All three companies' plans envision the government getting a
stake in the auto companies that would allow taxpayers to share in
future gains if they recover.
Along with detailed stabilization plans, the auto executives
were offering up a hefty dose of humility and a host of symbolic
concessions designed to repair their images, badly tattered after
they arrived in Washington last month on three separate private
jets to plead for federal help.
Ford CEO Alan Mulally, GM CEO Rick Wagoner and Chrysler chief
Bob Nardelli all planned to road-trip the 520 miles from Detroit to
Washington in fuel-efficient hybrid cars for hearings on Thursday
and Friday.
Mulally and Wagoner both said they'd work for $1 per year _
something Chrysler's plan said Nardelli already does _ if their
firms took any government loan money, while Ford offered to cancel
management bonuses and salaried employees' merit raises next
year, and GM said it would slash top executives' pay. Ford and
GM both said they would sell their corporate aircraft.
The executives are going out of their way to show deference to
lawmakers and a willingness to flog themselves for past mistakes.
"I think we learned a lot from that experience," Mulally
told The Associated Press in an interview.
Ford, in far better shape than GM and Chrysler, asked for a $9
billion "standby line of credit" to stabilize its
business but said it didn't expect to tap the funds unless one
of Detroit's other Big Three went bust. Its plan projected Ford
would break even or turn a pretax profit in 2011.
The company plans to cut its number of dealers by more than 600,
to 3,790 by the end of the year.
The unions were preparing to make sacrifices as well. United
Auto Workers leaders summoned local union leaders from across the
country to an emergency meeting Wednesday in Detroit to discuss
possible concessions. Up for discussion were the possibility of
scrapping a much-maligned jobs bank in which laid-off workers keep
receiving most of their pay and postponing the automakers'
payments into a multibillion-dollar union-administered health care
fund.
U.S. automakers are struggling to stay afloat heading into 2009
under the weight of an economic meltdown, the worst auto sales in
decades and a tight credit market. The three burned through nearly
$18 billion in cash reserves during the past quarter.
Ford's recovery blueprint said it would invest $14 billion
over the next seven years to boost its vehicles' fuel
efficiency, and it said it would improve the overall efficiency of
its fleet by an average of 14 percent next year. The company plans
to speed its rollout of electric and hybrid gas-electric
vehicles.
And Ford is calling for a partnership among automakers, parts
suppliers and the government to develop new battery technologies
domestically, so the U.S. doesn't have to rely on foreign
batteries _ as it now does on foreign oil _ to power its cars.
Besides cutting its number of dealers, it will trim its major
sourcing suppliers by more than half, to 750 from 1,600.
GM said it would make huge cuts in its numbers of workers as
well as reductions in its vehicle brands and plants by 2012. The
auto giant is seeking a $12 billion loan to keep it running, plus a
$6 billion line of credit in case market conditions worsen.
GM would focus on four brands _ Chevrolet, GMC, Buick and
Cadillac. By 2012, the plan calls for 20,000 to 30,000 fewer
workers, a reduction of nine facilities and 1,750 fewer dealers.
The company also outlined efforts to negotiate swapping some of the
company's debt for equity stakes in the automaker.
Chrysler said it would cut costs by slashing employee benefits _
including suspending its match portion of the 401(k) retirement
plan and reducing its health care contribution for salaried workers
_ and terminating its lease car program. It said it would also ask
more productivity of each employee.
Chrysler's product plan includes the first full-function
electric-drive model in 2010 and expansion to additional models by
2013. The company's market penetration of electric-drive
vehicles will further increase with over 500,000 produced by 2013,
the blueprint said.
GM, according to its quarterly report filed with the Securities
and Exchange Commission, owes creditors $45 billion and it must pay
more than $7.5 billion early in 2010 to a UAW-administered trust
fund that will take over retiree health care payments.
Ford owes more than $26 billion, with $6.3 billion due to its
UAW trust fund at the end of 2009. Chrysler, a private company,
does not have to open its books, but its CEO, Nardelli, has said it
would be difficult for the company to make it without federal aid.
All three likely are negotiating with the UAW for delays in
payments to the trusts.
The companies are resisting calls that they file for bankruptcy,
arguing that no one would buy a car from an automaker that might
not survive the life of the vehicle.
___
Tom Krisher reported from Detroit. AP Writer Ken Thomas
contributed from Washington.
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