Future of the Viper????

VENOMAHOLIC

Enthusiast
Joined
Jun 13, 2005
Posts
1,832
Reaction score
9
Location
Rochester, NY
It is unfortunate that some regulations aren't relaxed for low production cars. Ideally (eventually) I suppose, the whiners will have us all driving exactly the same cars with exactly the same styling, safety, performance, etc.

Gee, that'll be fun.


The cars of the future are here in many respects. Hybrids, flexfuel, micro cars with exciting commercials are invading the USA. I read that despite using lighter materials and better alloys, cars are actually 300-400 lbs heavier on average because of all added safety equipment and features. :rolleyes:

However, Americans need their dream cars. I know I wouldn't have worked my asp off my whole life to buy a hybrid and I am sure many others feel that way. Capitalism requires trophies for those who contributed the most to the system otherwise there is no motivation. Supercars are a staple of the economy and are what inspire us to be our best so we may one day drive that car on the poster on our bedroom wall.

The V10 will surely not last forever but there will be something to go fast in. The supercars of the future may never be as outrageous as a 488-505ci V10 but will go fast. Don't wait to buy your V10 because the engine is on borrowed time.
 

Cobraken

Enthusiast
Joined
Apr 13, 2004
Posts
799
Reaction score
0
Location
Southern Oregon
The Ford GR-1 project was still born. The 10 cyl engine 1st was shown in the Cobra prototype show car & it was known then it was not feasible for production w/out major mods. Hence the reworked 5.4 cammer. Saleen & Rousch only had 2 yr contracts for assembling the Ford GT & the plan was then to manufacture the Cobra for a 2 yr run. Rumors had it the GR-1 would go instead of the Cobra but both projects were killed as the GT started in regular production. No plans for any replacement.

The Viper, in my opinion, was an excercise that exceeded any of the originators' dreams. From an economic standpoint it does not make sense to continue production for Chrysler as a "halo" vehicle as the pendulum is swinging to alternative fuels vehicles as the halos of the near future. You might see design proposals for future "Vipers", but a new buyer will have no incentives to continue the Viper. Just as Ford decided that Mustang would carry its downsized performance image, I don't doubt that Chrysler SRT will go to the hemi pony car as it's performance image, it's cheaper. Dodges' race budget will continue to shrink & anyway for the last few yrs its been concentrated on regular production vehicles (NASCAR) & not specialty cars like the Viper.
 

RMBSRT

Enthusiast
Joined
Mar 7, 2006
Posts
308
Reaction score
0
Location
TX
Looks like the talk is getting serious on selling Chrysler. A news article in the Dallas Morning News spoke of a selling price of $4.7 billion. The competition is between the investor in Canada and several Private Equity firms. Looks like the Germans are really going to bail.....
 

RMBSRT

Enthusiast
Joined
Mar 7, 2006
Posts
308
Reaction score
0
Location
TX
The Ford GR-1 project was still born. The 10 cyl engine 1st was shown in the Cobra prototype show car & it was known then it was not feasible for production w/out major mods. Hence the reworked 5.4 cammer. Saleen & Rousch only had 2 yr contracts for assembling the Ford GT & the plan was then to manufacture the Cobra for a 2 yr run. Rumors had it the GR-1 would go instead of the Cobra but both projects were killed as the GT started in regular production. No plans for any replacement.

The Viper, in my opinion, was an excercise that exceeded any of the originators' dreams. From an economic standpoint it does not make sense to continue production for Chrysler as a "halo" vehicle as the pendulum is swinging to alternative fuels vehicles as the halos of the near future. You might see design proposals for future "Vipers", but a new buyer will have no incentives to continue the Viper. Just as Ford decided that Mustang would carry its downsized performance image, I don't doubt that Chrysler SRT will go to the hemi pony car as it's performance image, it's cheaper. Dodges' race budget will continue to shrink & anyway for the last few yrs its been concentrated on regular production vehicles (NASCAR) & not specialty cars like the Viper.


You make a great point. I think further evidence of this is the how the 2008 car is really a mix of old and new. It seems that DCX put any more development on hold so we ended up with a new drive train in the old body style. I am really starting to see the light on this whole deal. We probably have two more years at best for the Viper. I think DCX is leaving and future development of the Viper to the new owners of Chrysler. The next two years is to get their money back for the investment into the new drive train. After that…we are SOL!

:nana: :usa: :nana:
 

Yellow32

Enthusiast
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Posts
678
Reaction score
0
Location
texas
Looks like the talk is getting serious on selling Chrysler. A news article in the Dallas Morning News spoke of a selling price of $4.7 billion. The competition is between the investor in Canada and several Private Equity firms. Looks like the Germans are really going to bail.....

With the speed this is moving forward cross yer fingers that the '08 is ever produced!

Remember CAAP is currently closed/offline, it's not like they are in current production...

-J
 

Yellow32

Enthusiast
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Posts
678
Reaction score
0
Location
texas
Have any dealers been able to place any 2008 orders yet?

Not that I can tell, earliest I have heard is May, latest is August (from different dealers).

-J
 

Yellow32

Enthusiast
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Posts
678
Reaction score
0
Location
texas
Opening bid for Chrysler: $4.7 billion - Mar 24 2007

Detriot Free Press Mar 24 2007
==============================
http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070324/BUSINESS01/703240317
==============================

Opening bid for Chrysler: $4.7 billion
Automaker could fetch much more than Magna offer
March 24, 2007

BY TIM HIGGINS

FREE PRESS BUSINESS WRITER

Let the bidding begin.

Canadian auto supplier Magna International Inc.'s reported offer of roughly $4.7 billion to buy the Chrysler Group with a partner will likely smoke out other bids for the Auburn Hills-based unit of DaimlerChrysler AG, experts said Friday.

Advertisement

Citing unnamed sources, KeyBanc Capital Markets analyst Brett Hoselton said Friday in a report that Magna had joined with a private equity partner in placing an offer worth $4.6 billion to $4.7 billion. Magna would take a 20% to 25% stake in the automaker.

Since DaimlerChrysler chief Dieter Zetsche said all options were on the table for Chrysler's future, estimates of possible sale prices have reached about $14 billion, with the most recent in the range of $4 billion to $6 billion. Hoselton and others expect competing bids to trump Magna's.

"This is just beginning. There is going to be a lot of action now. I think it is game on," said Van Conway, senior managing director of the management consulting firm Conway, MacKenzie & Dunleavy in Birmingham.

Hoselton described Magna's bid as opportunistic.

While Magna views its offer as low and unlikely to prevail, he said in a note to investors, it also sees it as an opportunity to purchase an inexpensive stake in the automaker, should other bidders retreat.

The parts maker appears to have contact with the two leading contenders to purchase Chrysler, private equity firms Blackstone Group and Cerberus Capital Management, to learn the possibilities of purchasing some portion of Chrysler's assets, he added.

DaimlerChrysler stock jumped $4.76, or 6.1%, to $82.36 on Friday -- the highest level in more than seven years.

The Free Press first reported in February that Magna's chairman, Frank Stronach, met with Zetsche on the day Zetsche announced that all options were on the table for Chrysler and refused to rule out selling the unit.

Daimler-Benz AG spent about $40 billion in 1998 to acquire Chrysler Corp. in a deal dubbed a merger of equals and a marriage made in heaven.

The marriage was soon on the rocks, and German shareholders have become more vocal about their displeasure. Two shareholders, who own enough shares to force an extension of DaimlerChrysler's shareholders meeting April 4, have put 15 measures on the table for consideration, including dropping Chrysler from the company's name.

Hoselton said there were signs that DaimlerChrysler is truly looking to get rid of Chrysler: Chrysler is being removed from the company's financial reporting system and its supplier invoices are being handled through a third party.

And though the company announced in February its second major turnaround plan in the past decade in hopes of returning the unit to profitability after losing $1.5 billion last year, he said Chrysler "lacks any substantive internal restructuring plan."

"We believe this ... indicates the parent's interest to sell the automaker," he said.

DaimlerChrysler's top spokesman, Hartmut Schick, declined to comment Friday.

Cerberus and Blackstone also have not commented. Blackstone, founded in 1985 by bankers Stephen Schwarzman and Pete Peterson, has just launched an initial public offering that aims to raise $4 billion for a minority stake in the leveraged-buyout firm.

In addition to the private equity firms and Magna, General Motors Corp. has surfaced as being interested in an alliance.

This week, Citigroup Research analyst Jon Rogers issued a report saying that GM shouldn't be ruled out.

"DaimlerChrysler should be ready to make a decision on Chrysler's future in the coming months," Rogers wrote. "Private equity sponsors appear the likely buyers of Chrysler, but GM cannot entirely be ruled out as it can extract significant synergies."

Rogers said suppliers would likely be better off with a private equity buyer. "They could acquire noncore Chrysler assets and would likely not suffer from production losses of a streamlined GM-Chrysler entity."

Earlier this week, Goldman Sachs said that Chrysler Group could be worth $6 billion to a private equity buyer. Previous reports by Hoselton said the leading private equity firms view Chrysler as being worth $5 billion, and that Magna viewed it as worth $4 billion.

Tracy Fuerst, Magna spokeswoman, reiterated the company's position Friday, saying that DaimlerChrysler is one of the company's largest clients and that it is imperative that Magna fully understand the situation at Chrysler.

"Therefore, we continue to review potential alternatives regarding the future of the Chrysler Group. Discussions about this matter ... will not be disclosed publicly, nor will the company comment on speculation," she said in a statement.
 

InjectTheVenom

Enthusiast
Joined
Mar 10, 2004
Posts
6,859
Reaction score
0
Re: Opening bid for Chrysler: $4.7 billion - Mar 24 2007

Oh man, here we go.. *fingers crossed*
 

Yellow32

Enthusiast
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Posts
678
Reaction score
0
Location
texas
April 2, 2007: Chrysler offers said to be up to $9 billion

From:

http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070402/BUSINESS01/704020342/1002/BUSINESS

Chrysler offers said to be up to $9 billion
Equity firm made bid, paper reports
April 2, 2007

BY TIM HIGGINS

FREE PRESS BUSINESS WRITER

STUTTGART, Germany -- DaimlerChrysler AG has reportedly received offers for its Chrysler Group as high as $9 billion.

Private equity firm Cerberus Capital Management is believed to have made an offer Friday, but it is not known for how much. The firm visited the Auburn Hills-based Chrysler unit to review the automaker's finances and plans in preparation for a possible bid.

Welt am Sonntag, a German newspaper, reported Sunday that Cerberus placed the offer Friday and is particularly interested in Chrysler's finance arm.

Friday was thought to be the deadline for firms to indicate if they wanted to continue in purchase talks.

The paper said the company had received bids ranging from $6 billion to $9 billion. Others familiar with the talks have said dollar values won't be set until later.

Analysts predicted that Cerberus and another private equity firm, the Blackstone Group, valued Chrysler between $5 billion and $6 billion.

Daimler-Benz AG spent about $40 billion to acquire Chrysler in 1998.

Canadian auto parts supplier Magna International Inc. also is reported to be interested in Chrysler, one of the supplier's largest customers. It is looking for a private equity partner in an offer, with reports saying Magna values Chrysler at $4.6 billion to $4.7 billion.

Speculation erupted Feb. 14 about Chrysler's future when DaimlerChrysler Chairman Dieter Zetsche announced that all options were open for the money-losing U.S. unit, including a sale.

On Wednesday, Zetsche and Chrysler Group President Tom Lasorda will face DaimlerChrysler shareholders, many of whom would like the company to jettison Chrysler, at the automaker's annual meeting in Berlin.

The Free Press has reported that General Motors Corp. had talked with DaimlerChrysler about a deal in January, but GM was unwilling to consider as much money as the private equity groups or Magna.


-J
 

Yellow32

Enthusiast
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Posts
678
Reaction score
0
Location
texas
DaimlerChrysler\'s shareholders to meet amid background of Chrysler sell-off

From:
http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/04/02/business/EU-FIN-COM-Germany-DaimlerChrysler-Meeting.php

DaimlerChrysler's shareholders to meet amid background of Chrysler sell-off
The Associated Press
Published: April 2, 2007

FRANKFURT, Germany: Only one theme is expected to dominate DaimlerChrysler AG's annual shareholder meeting this week: How soon can the U.S. Chrysler unit be sold off and when can the company go back to being Daimler-Benz AG?

But despite boisterous calls by shareholder groups that want to see the German-American automaker carve off its U.S. counterpart and become completely German again, those looking for the answers are likely to go away disappointed.

Though the company has not even confirmed it is in talks to sell off Chrysler, for which it paid some US$36 billion in 1998, speculation has run rampant that a deal is in the offing. Most analysts, however, do not believe any announcement will come at Wednesday's meeting where some 8,000 shareholders will fill the Berlin Messe and pepper the board with questions and comments.

"This is an unlikely venue for such an announcement," said Stephen B. Cheetham, a research analyst for European autos with Sanford C. Bernstein Ltd. in London. "They will not normally be tied to the timetable. It's highly unlikely that we will get an announcement for this meeting."

In a filing with the U.S. Securities & Exchange Commission last week outlining the meeting, there is no motion to consider the sale of Chrysler, which has been on the table since Chief Executive Dieter Zetsche said Feb. 14 that all options for the unit were on the table.

At least some of the company's more-than one million shareholders have been pushing for a divorce from Chrysler both in style and substance.

Ekkehard Wenger and Leonhard Knoll have put forth such a motion, calling for the company to revert back to its original name, Daimler-Benz AG.

They argue in the motion that to "maintain a corporate name that evokes associations with the failure of the business combination with Chrysler is detrimental to the image of the corporation and its products."

But the big issue will be what to actually do with Chrysler.

Holger Rothbauer, a member of KADC Critical Shareholders-DaimlerChrysler, which opposed the 1998 acquisition, said he suspects Zetsche made his February announcement as a way to stem shareholder dissent at the annual meeting.

"I think they tried to do everything at the moment, especially in terms of Chrysler, to pacify people because they assume that there would be a major outburst at the shareholder meeting," Rothbauer said.

Though he opposed the merger, he is against selling Chrysler now because it is undervalued. Instead, he wants to see the unit fixed and then disposed of for a bigger gain.

No matter when Chrysler is sold, if ever, Daimler is unlikely to make back what it paid. Analysts value the unit anywhere from nothing to US$13.7 billion (€10.29 billion).

Estimates vary with the value placed on assets such as brand names, factories and materials, all weighed against Chrysler's estimated US$19 billion (€14.3 billion) liability to pay healthcare benefits for unionized retirees.

Some analysts say the liability exceeds the value of the assets, meaning that DaimlerChrysler would have to pay someone to take Chrysler. Others say the company is worth more to the right buyer.

Rothbauer also said joining with Chrysler tainted the Mercedes image of quality.

His group, he said, would demand the ouster of Zetsche, whom he blames for getting Daimler-Benz into the deal in the first place.

So far no clear buyer has emerged, but Canadian auto-parts supplier Magna International Inc. has reportedly submitted a bid to buy Chrysler for between US$4.6 billion to US$4.7 billion (€3.45 to €3.53 billion). Major private equity firms Blackstone Group and Cerberus Capital Management LLP are also rumored to be in the hunt after both perused Chrysler's books during a visit to its Auburn Hills, Michigan-based headquarters in February.

Another name touted as a possible buyer has been General Motors Corp. which reportedly expressed interest shortly after Zetsche's announcement in taking over Chrysler in exchange for a stake in GM.

Alex Neuberger, an analyst who follows DaimlerChrysler for the CA Cheuvreux brokerage in Frankfurt, said Zetsche is under intense pressure from German shareholders to get rid of Chrysler.

He suspects Zetsche was dismayed in February, when another round of restructuring was announced, that Chrysler CEO Tom LaSorda could only promise a 2.5 percent return on sales by 2009.

The rate of return was low considering it would be after the restructuring took hold and numerous new products would hit the market, Neuberger said.

"If 2.5 percent is everything, I think he said 'Hey guys, let's pull the plug,'" Neuberger said. "It's a horrible cash drain to DaimlerChrysler," Neuberger said. "We just lost confidence that this business can be turned into a value-creating business. If you can't do that in nine years, how can you do it in the next nine years?"

-J
 

Yellow32

Enthusiast
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Posts
678
Reaction score
0
Location
texas
Daimler Investors May Push Zetsche to Accelerate Chrysler Sale

From:
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601085&sid=adYRp6tyRm64&refer=europe

Daimler Investors May Push Zetsche to Accelerate Chrysler Sale

By Jeremy van Loon

April 3 (Bloomberg) -- Chief Executive Officer Dieter Zetsche will probably face pressure tomorrow from investors seeking progress on the sale of the unprofitable U.S. Chrysler division.

Zetsche, hailed at last year's meeting for increasing sales at Chrysler, will meet shareholders in Berlin in what may be the last annual meeting of the combined company. Zetsche said Feb. 14 that ``all options are on the table'' for Chrysler, after the unit ended 2006 with a loss of $1.5 billion.

Juergen Schrempp, Zetsche's predecessor, purchased Chrysler nine years ago for $36 billion in an attempt to bring together Mercedes-Benz luxury sedans and Dodge pickup trucks. Analysts say Chrysler is now valued at about $6 billion because the unit lost market share to Toyota Motor Corp.'s more fuel-efficient vehicles. Blackstone Group LP and Centerbridge Capital Partners LLC plan to bid for Chrysler, people familiar with the talks said on March 30.

``We've said right from the very beginning that two very different car manufacturers like Mercedes and Chrysler don't fit together,'' said Juergen Graesslin, head of the Critical Shareholders of DaimlerChrysler Association that voted against the takeover at a special shareholders meeting in 1998. ``Premium and mass market are incompatible.''

Shares of DaimlerChrysler have risen 26 percent since Feb. 14. The shares are down about 15 percent since the first day of trading following the takeover.

Zetsche, 53, who led the Auburn Hills, Michigan-based unit for five years until September 2005, eliminated 40,000 jobs during his tenure. In February he said another 13,000 jobs will be cut and a factory in Delaware closed. Other possible bidders for Chrysler include Canadian parts suppler Magna International Inc. and Cerberus Capital Management LLC, two people familiar with the talks said on March 14.

No-Confidence Vote

A sale of Chrysler, the third-largest U.S.-based automaker, may fetch as much as $6 billion, Goldman Sachs analyst Stefan Burgstaller in London said in a March 16 note.

Graesslin's group has added a no-confidence motion to the agenda of tomorrow's meeting, saying it told management in 1998 that the union would result in job losses.

In response, the company said then ``there is no danger of jobs being destroyed. DaimlerChrysler will be created through the combination of two healthy companies.''

In addition to the 40,000 jobs lost at Chrysler in the last nine years, about 9,000 were slashed at Mercedes. Another 6,000 administrative and managerial positions, mainly in Germany, are being cut. The truck division also shrank its workforce four years ago following a slump in U.S. demand.

Market Share

Chrysler's future will be the key subject at the meeting, said Klaus Kaldemorgen, head of Deutsche Bank AG's DWS mutual fund unit, which manages the equivalent of $338 billion, including DaimlerChrysler shares.

``The sale of Chrysler will be the most important topic,'' said Kaldemorgen. ``It will take some time to fix a deal. But once Zetsche finds a buyer, it will have a positive impact on the share price.''

Chrysler's U.S. market share dropped to 12.9 percent last year from 16.1 percent in 1998. Reliance on pickups including the Dodge Ram and sport-utility vehicles such as the Jeep Commander contributed to the decline. Consumers in the last two years turned to fuel-efficient vehicles as gasoline rose to $3 a gallon in 2006.

Leonhard Knoll and Ekkehard Wenger, shareholders who also opposed the merger in 1998, want to drop ``Chrysler'' from the company's name. Wenger and Knoll also are demanding that annual meetings be held in Stuttgart, where the company is based, instead of Berlin.

Chrysler Earnings

``Maintaining a corporate name that evokes associations with the failure of the business combination with Chrysler is detrimental to the image of the corporation and its products,'' they say in a motion for the meeting. ``This is all the more true as unflattering nicknames such as Doting Daimler, Daimler-Crisis or even Crime-ler have long been in circulation.''

The job cuts have not steadied Chrysler earnings. The U.S. division since 1998 has posted annual profits of as much as $5 billion and losses almost as large.

Graesslin says he won't be disappointed if this turns out to be the last meeting of a combined DaimlerChrysler.

``Our rejection of the Chrysler takeover has been proven right,'' he said. ``Mercedes has been starved of investment while money flowed across the pond to the U.S. We never believed the promises offered by management.''

Annual Buyback

The agenda includes a motion to elect Clemens Boersig, chairman of Deutsche Bank AG, to the supervisory board and elevate board member Manfred Bischoff to chairman, replacing Hilmar Kopper. About 8,000 shareholders are expected to attend the meeting this year, less than half the number that attended the first annual meeting in 1999.

Bischoff is co-chairman of the European Aeronautic, Defence & Space Co., whose largest single shareholder is DaimlerChrysler. Kopper, a former Deutsche bank CEO and chairman, has held the post for 17 years and been a lighting rod for criticism as losses mounted and the shares declined.

Deutsche Bank, which owns a 4.4 percent stake in the carmaker, was the largest shareholder, until it reduced its stake in 2005. Kuwait is now the largest shareholder with 7.06 percent.

Shareholders will also vote at the meeting on what has become an annual motion for the company to buy back its own shares.

To contact the reporter on this story: Jeremy van Loon in Berlin at [email protected]

Last Updated: April 2, 2007 19:26 EDT

-J
 

Y2K5SRT

Enthusiast
Joined
Apr 26, 1999
Posts
7,891
Reaction score
0
Location
Overland Park, KS
Re: Daimler Investors May Push Zetsche to Accelerate Chrysler Sale

Kuwait is now the largest shareholder with 7.06 percent.
That was the most positive thing I read there, assuming DaimlerChrysler is still that same company a year from now: Talk about an investor that WANTS gas guzzlers in the line up, and this is it! If we can get Exxon Mobil to either buy some shares or purchase Chrysler outright then the future of the Viper is written in stone! ;)
 

Yellow32

Enthusiast
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Posts
678
Reaction score
0
Location
texas
Decision on Chrysler Sale May Come Next Week-Paper

From:
http://investing.reuters.co.uk/news/arti...90995-OISBI.XML


Decision on Chrysler Sale May Come Next Week-Paper
Tue Apr 3, 2007 7:05 PM BST


FRANKFURT (Reuters) - A decision on a sale of Daimler Chrysler's (DCXGn.DE: Quote, Profile , Research) money-losing U.S. Chrysler business could be reached next week, a German magazine reported on Tuesday.

According to the online edition of Wirtschaftswoche the company's head of strategy, Ruediger Grube, is set to meet with potential buyers early next week and may sign a contract for a sale.

Four or five parties are interested in making a serious offer or already have done so, the magazine reported without citing sources.

A sale to private equity firms, however, is becoming more unlikely, it said.



The magazine also reported that the company wants to keep a stake of 10 to 20 percent in Chrysler.

DaimlerChrysler will hold its annual shareholder's meeting on Wednesday but the fate of Chrysler has not been put on the official agenda.

The two carmakers merged in 1998.

People familiar with the matter told Reuters last month that private equity group Cerberus Capital Management [CBS.UL], buyout firm The Blackstone Group [BG.UL] and Canadian car parts group Magna International Inc. (MGa.TO: Quote, Profile , Research) were front-runners to acquire Chrysler for a price tag that could top $5 billion.

One source said last week that General Motors Corp. (GM.N: Quote, Profile , Research) was unlikely to make a first-round bid for Chrysler and would instead monitor the situation with an eye on buying any assets that the new owner might want to divest.

-J
 

Yellow32

Enthusiast
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Posts
678
Reaction score
0
Location
texas
Bids for Chrysler on table

From:
http://www.detnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070403/UPDATE/704030465

Bids for Chrysler on table

Automaker's potential sale likely major topic Wednesday at DaimlerChrysler's shareholders meeting.

Bill Vlasic and Christine Tierney / The Detroit News

The Blackstone Group and Cerberus Capital Management, two of the nation's largest private-equity firms, have made formal bids to buy the Chrysler Group from German automaker DaimlerChrysler AG., according to people close to the talks.

No details were known about the size of the bids, but the offers were said to qualify both firms to compete in the next round of the Chrysler sale process.

A third prospective buyer -- Canadian supplier Magna International Inc. -- also has submitted an offer that keeps it in the running to acquire the U.S. division of DaimlerChrysler.

DaimlerChrysler is expected to choose one bidder as an exclusive negotiating partner by the end of April, according to people familiar with the situation.

The bidders, however, could face stiff opposition from union leaders in North America and Germany, a union official told The Detroit News late Tuesday.

A dozen union officials including United Auto Workers President Ron Gettelfinger met for dinner in Berlin Tuesday and reaffirmed their position: that they hoped Chrysler would remain a part of DaimlerChrysler and opposed a sale of Chrysler to a private equity group or other buyer that would dismember it.

"We would not support a private equity group, or a combination of a private equity group and corporation, that would seek the destruction of our jobs," said Bob Chernecki, an assistant to Canadian Auto Workers President Buzz Hargrove who attended the dinner, which was also attended by Erich Klemm, a German union leader who is vice chairman of DaimlerChrysler's supervisory board.

Chernecki told The News there was "absolute solidarity" among the various labor factions.

He said about "20 to 25 entities" have shown interest in Chrysler, judging from number of people who have called on union leaders to discuss a potential deal for Chrysler.

He confirmed that only "handful" of bidders are serious.

The potential sale of Chrysler is expected to be a major topic today at DaimlerChrysler's annual shareholders meeting in Berlin.

While DaimlerChrysler CEO Dieter Zetsche is not likely to reveal much about the sale process, he will be under intense pressure to at least confirm that Chrysler is on the auction block.

"The shareholders have clearly said we want this albatross off of our neck," said Joseph Phillippi of the firm AutoTrends Consulting.

Zetsche put Chrysler's future in question on Feb. 14 when he said that "all options" were under consideration for the former No. 3 U.S. automaker acquired by Daimler-Benz AG in 1998.

Since then, Blackstone, Cerberus and Magna have visited Chrysler's headquarters in Auburn Hills in preparation for making bids.

General Motors Corp. has also held talks with DaimlerChrysler about a Chrysler deal, but its initial bid was rejected as too low.

People close to the process said Blackstone, Cerberus and Magna delivered their offers recently to J.P. Morgan Chase, the investment banker hired by DaimlerChrysler to handle a Chrysler sale.

The exact amount of the bids is unknown, but a source close to DaimlerChrysler said the automaker is hoping for a price of about $8 billion for Chrysler.

With three bidders on board, DaimlerChrysler will begin evaluating the contenders with a goal of picking one to negotiate with exclusively.

That decision is not expected before the end of April, according to people familiar with the talks.

The unwinding of the merger of Daimler-Benz and Chrysler would be an historic event in the global auto industry.

While the merger heralded a new era of international auto alliances, the possible break-up underscores the immense challenges in linking a mass-market manufacturer like Chrysler to a luxury brand such as Mercedes-Benz.

When Chrysler posted a $1.5-billion loss last year, investors stepped up pressure on Zetsche and DaimlerChrysler's supervisory board to dump the U.S. unit.

The three active bidders have since staked out different approaches to a potential Chrysler deal.

With more than 100 companies under its control, Blackstone is considered the pre-eminent player in the private-equity arena. The firm has a track record of paying premium prices to win out over rival bidders. Blackstone is working with another private-equity firm, Centerbridge Partners, on the Chrysler deal. Cerberus has made a huge impact on the U.S. auto industry in a short period of time. Last year, Cerberus acquired majority control of GM's finance business and launched an effort to buy the bankrupt supplier Delphi Corp.

Magna, a major Chrysler supplier, has positioned itself as an alternative to the private-equity firms. But handicapping the bidders is, for now, a difficult proposition. "This is new territory," said Phillippi. "No one has ever done a leveraged buyout of a $60-billion automobile company before."

You can reach Bill Vlasic at (313) 222-2152 or [email protected]. Vlasic reported from Detroit and Christine Tierney reported from Berlin.

-J
 

Yellow32

Enthusiast
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Posts
678
Reaction score
0
Location
texas
DaimlerChrysler in talks about sale of unit

From:
http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/bus/stories/040507dnbuschryslertalks.32865b.html

DaimlerChrysler in talks about sale of unit 7:49 AM CDT

07:50 AM CDT on Wednesday, April 4, 2007
Associated Press

BERLIN – Confirming weeks of conjecture and rumor, DaimlerChrysler AG's chairman said Wednesday that it has been in talks with people about the sale of its struggling Chrysler unit.

"In this context, I can confirm that we are talking with some of the potential partners who have shown a clear interest," chairman Dieter Zetsche said before the company's annual shareholder meeting.

He did not name any of the companies that have been in talks.

"So far, I am satisfied with the process. Everything is going according to plan," Zetsche said.

Zetsche stunned the automotive world on Feb. 14 when he said that continued losses and fierce competition in the United States meant that the German-American automaker was considering all options for its Chrysler unit, including a possible sale.

Zetsche did not say whether any decision to sell Chrysler had been made or if the company was any closer to a solution.

"It is also true that we need to keep all options open, and that I cannot disclose any details, because we need to have the maximum scope for maneuver," he said in a copy of his remarks to shareholders released ahead of the meeting.

The company's management requires "the greatest possible flexibility so that we can identify and then professionally implement the best solution," Zetsche added.

Zetsche's announcement in February came after the U.S. unit's $1.5 billion loss in 2006.

The company also said it would cut 13,000 jobs and reduce production capacity by 400,000 units as part of a "recovery and transformation plan", aimed at bringing Chrysler back into profitability by 2008.

No clear front-runner has yet emerged to buy Chrysler, but Canadian auto-parts supplier Magna International Inc. reportedly has submitted a bid to buy the business for as much as $4.7 billion.

Major private equity firms Blackstone Group and Cerberus Capital Management LLP also are rumored to be in the hunt.

If DaimlerChrysler does sell off the U.S. unit, it will mark a significant change in fortunes since it bought Auburn Hills, Mich.-based Chrysler in 1998.

Despite helping to keep the company afloat as little as two years ago when the Mercedes Car Group suffered through massive quality control problems and declining sales, at least some of the company's more-than 1 million shareholders have been pushing for a divorce – in both style and substance.

Shareholders Ekkehard Wenger and Leonhard Knoll put forward a motion calling for the company to revert back to its original name, Daimler-Benz AG.

They argued in their motion that to "maintain a corporate name that evokes associations with the failure of the business combination with Chrysler is detrimental to the image of the corporation and its products."

That in itself, however, would not resolve the question of what to do with Chrysler.

No matter when Chrysler is sold, if ever, Daimler is unlikely to make back what it paid. Analysts have valued the unit from between nothing to $13.7 billion.

The estimates vary with the value placed on assets such as brand names, factories and materials, all weighed against Chrysler's estimated $19 billion liability to pay health care benefits for unionized retirees.

Some analysts say the liability exceeds the value of the assets, meaning that DaimlerChrysler would have to pay someone to take Chrysler. Others say the company would be attractive to the right buyer.

DaimlerChrysler shares started the day up 1.03 percent in Frankfurt to euro62.64 (US$83.67).

-J
 

Yellow32

Enthusiast
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Posts
678
Reaction score
0
Location
texas
Daimler Says Company in Talks on Sale of Chrysler (Update6)

From:
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=asPo1NV_1O9M&refer=home

Daimler Says Company in Talks on Sale of Chrysler (Update6)

By Jeremy van Loon

April 4 (Bloomberg) -- DaimlerChrysler AG Chief Executive Officer Dieter Zetsche said for the first time he's negotiating the sale of Chrysler, preparing to unwind the merger that foundered in an increasingly competitive U.S. auto market.

``We are talking with some of the potential partners who have shown a clear interest,'' said Zetsche at the company's annual general meeting today in Berlin. He declined to identify the bidders or disclose details of the talks.

Zetsche said Feb. 14 that ``all options are on the table'' for Chrysler, after the unit ended 2006 with a loss of $1.5 billion. Chrysler's U.S. market share dropped to 12.9 percent last year from 16.1 percent in 1998. Blackstone Group LP and Centerbridge Capital Partners LLC plan to bid for Chrysler, people familiar with the talks said on March 30.

``We'd be very grateful if DaimlerChrysler got rid of Chrysler,'' Henning Gebhardt, a fund manager at DWS Investment GmbH in Frankfurt, told Zetsche and executives at the meeting. ``DWS welcomes the fact that DaimlerChrysler is looking at all options.''

The carmaker was created when former Daimler-Benz AG CEO Juergen Schrempp engineered the $36 billion takeover of Auburn Hills, Michigan-based Chrysler Corp. in 1998 and the shares opened at 72.48 euros on their first day of trading. Alliances followed with Mitsubishi Motors Corp. and Hyundai Motor Corp.

Other potential buyers for Chrysler include Canadian parts suppler Magna International Inc. and Cerberus Capital Management LLC, two people familiar with the talks said on March 14.

Market Reaction

Shares of Stuttgart, Germany-based DaimlerChrysler fell as much as 1.05 euros, or 1.7 percent, to 60.95 euros and were down1.3 percent at 2:48 p.m. in Frankfurt. The stock is up 24 percent since Feb. 14 when the company said the U.S. unit might be sold.

``They've entered a one-way street and it would be hard to reverse direction'' on the sale of Chrysler, said Michael Raab, an analyst with Sal Oppenheim in Frankfurt with a ``buy'' rating on the shares. ``The market would be disappointed.''

Zetsche, 53, who led the Auburn Hills, Michigan-based unit for five years until September 2005, eliminated 40,000 jobs during his tenure. In February he said another 13,000 jobs will be cut and a factory in Delaware closed.

``It is also true that we need to keep all options open because we need the maximum scope for maneuver,'' Zetsche told shareholders today. ``So far I am satisfied with the process. Everything is going according to plan.''

Formal Bids

Blackstone, Cerberus and Magna have made formal bids to buy Chrysler, the Detroit News reported, citing people familiar with the talks. DaimlerChrysler is expected to pick an exclusive negotiating partner by the end of the month, the report said, adding that the carmaker is looking to sell the unit for about $8 billion.

``Mr. Zetsche, you have reversed the value destruction trend among management but you have to keep going,'' said Lars Labryga, a spokesman for the SdK shareholders association. ``We're counting on you to make the sale of Chrysler happen and to get a good price.''

Reliance on gas-guzzling models such as the Dodge Ram pickup and the Jeep Commander contributed to the decline as Toyota Motor Corp. gained with more fuel-efficient vehicles, including the Prius hybrid, with gasoline rising to $3 a gallon.

Zetsche appeared in television spots in 2006 as the character ``Dr. Z'' in an attempt to establish a stronger connection between German engineering and Chrysler products.

`Sustainable Profit'

Zetsche's plan for Chrysler includes ``sustainable'' profitability, the best possible option for the employees and making Chrysler competitive, he said today. When all options have been reviewed, DaimlerChrysler will choose the ``best that meets our criteria,'' he added.

Chrysler will introduce 20 all-new models between now and 2009, including 13 refreshed vehicles.

`` Zetsche is a good man,'' Edwin Haidu, a shareholder. ``Chrysler was a mistake from Schrempp, not Zetsche.''

DaimlerChrysler expects a ``considerable increase'' in profitability over the next three years. Zetsche on Feb. 14 said vehicle sales for the group will increase slightly this year and that profitability should increase ``significantly'' over the next two years. The company is planning a more detailed outlook when first-quarter results are published in May.

Full-year group net income in 2006 rose 14 percent to 3.2 billion euros ($4.3 billion) from 2.8 billion euros. Revenue increased 1 percent to 151.6 billion euros.

The cost to insure 10 million euros of DaimlerChrysler debt declined 0.9 percent to 36,775 euros. The carmaker has about 44.2 billion euros in outstanding bonds, according to Bloomberg data.

New Chairman

The agenda today includes a motion to elect Clemens Boersig, chairman of Deutsche Bank AG, to the supervisory board and elevate board member Manfred Bischoff to chairman, replacing Hilmar Kopper. Bischoff is co-chairman of the European Aeronautic, Defence & Space Co., whose largest single shareholder is DaimlerChrysler. Kopper, a former Deutsche bank CEO and chairman, has held the post for 17 years and been a lightning rod for criticism as losses mounted and the shares declined.

``The annual meeting has been a battleground between investors and management over the past eight years,'' said Mike Dean, an analyst at Credit Suisse in London. ``An industrial solution makes more sense'' as a possible buyer for Chrysler.

Deutsche Bank, which owns a 4.4 percent stake in the carmaker, was the largest shareholder, until it reduced its stake in 2005. Kuwait is now the largest shareholder with 7.06 percent.

Shareholders will also vote at the meeting on what has become an annual motion for the company to buy back its own shares.

To contact the reporters on this story: Jeremy van Loon in Berlin at [email protected] ; Chad Thomas in Berlin at [email protected]

Last Updated: April 4, 2007 08:59 EDT

-J
 

Yellow32

Enthusiast
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Posts
678
Reaction score
0
Location
texas
LOOKING GOOD: Kerkorian offers $4.5B for Chrysler

From:
http://money.cnn.com/2007/04/05/news/companies/kerkorian_chrysler/

Kerkorian offers $4.5B for Chrysler :usa:
Maverick financier proposes to take troubled automaker private, offers stake for UAW; Daimler stock rallies.

By Chris Isidore, CNNMoney.com senior writer

April 5 2007: 3:32 PM EDT

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Kirk Kerkorian, once the biggest shareholder of Chrysler Corp., has sent a letter to DaimlerChrysler offering to buy the struggling automaker back for $4.5 billion.

Kerkorian is proposing to take the struggling automaker private, and his bid is contingent upon reaching a deal on a new labor agreement with the United Auto Workers union.

His letter, released to the public, says he would offer ownership stakes to the union and its membership as well as Chrysler management were he to buy it.

He also said the offer is contingent on reaching what he called an "equitable arrangement" with DaimlerChrysler for it to assume some of the unfunded pension liabilities and health care costs of Chrysler retirees. But he said the cash offer is not contingent upon arranging financing.

DaimlerChrysler (up $3.06 to $84.13, Charts) shares jumped nearly 3 percent in Thursday afternoon trading, and shares of General Motors rallied as well.

Kerkorian's letter offers to give DaimlerChrysler a $100 million escrow fee, a quarter of which he said he would forfeit if he were to walk away from the deal after conducting due diligence.

Han Tjan, a spokesman for DaimlerChrysler's New York office, had only limited comment, saying, "We do confirm that we are potential interested partners. All options are open. We do not have any further comments."

A UAW spokesman was not immediately available for comment, nor was any spokesman for Kerkorian. In addition to releasing Kerkorian's letter, the financier's investment firm also released a letter to DaimlerChrysler from Jerry York, his adviser and a former Chrysler executive who helped to lead a previous turnaround at the company. In the letter he argues that fixing the problems at Chrysler would be easier for an independent but privately held company.

York's letter said Kerkorian would "offer a substantial portion of equity in the company to the UAW as part of finding a solution to ever-rising healthcare costs, which not only are unaffordable by corporations, but over time will likely prove to be unaffordable by governmental entities as well."

DaimlerChrysler Chairman and CEO Dieter Zetsche confirmed at the company's annual meeting Wednesday that it has been in discussions with buyers who had shown "clear interest" in the company's North American unit, which lost $1.5 billion last year and is not projected by the company to return to profitability until 2008.

The unit was essentially put up for sale on Feb. 14, when Zetsche said Daimler would look at all options for the company, the same day he and Chrysler executives unveiled a turnaround plan that called for the automaker to close plants and cut 13,000 jobs, about 16 percent of its North American staff.

The company's labor agreement with the UAW runs through September, as do similar agreements between the union and General Motors (Charts) and Ford (Charts). All three U.S.-based automakers have been losing share to Asian automakers such as Toyota Motor (Charts), which operate nonunion plants. Toyota passed DaimlerChrysler in U.S. sales for the first time in 2006 to take its traditional No. 3 ranking.

While Chrysler has been losing money, it does have some attractive assets, notably Jeep, and is reported to have attracted bids from some of the nation's largest private equity firms, including the Blackstone Group and Cerberus Capital Management, as well as from a Canadian parts supplier, Magna International (Charts).

Kerkorian's most recent investment in the auto industry did not go well. He started buying shares of GM in 2005, and boosted his stake to 9.9 percent. His associate, York, was put on GM's board.

Kerkorian and York pushed GM to cut pay for top executives and directors and slash its dividend in half in an effort to win support of the unions there. But he was unsuccessful in his efforts to get GM to join an alliance with Japanese automaker Nissan (Charts) and French automaker Renault, which own stakes in one another and share a CEO, Carlos Ghosn.

Kerkorian's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission show that he lost about $8.6 million buying and selling GM over a 19-month period, although dividends from the troubled automaker allowed him to walk away with more than $100 million in cash from the investment.

Kerkorian was the largest shareholder of Chrysler in 1998 when Daimler-Benz bought the company for $37 billion, and he remained an investor in the combined company right after the merger.

But he soon fell out with DaimlerChrysler leadership, accusing them of disguising an acquisition as a merger of equals between the German and American automakers that did not pay a sufficient takeover premium.

In November 2000 he sued DaimlerChrysler for $9 billion, and he subsequently sold his remaining stake in the company. His suit was dismissed in April 2005.

:2tu:

-J
 

Warfang

Enthusiast
Joined
Nov 27, 2004
Posts
6,912
Reaction score
0
Location
California, East Bay
Re: LOOKING GOOD: Kerkorian offers $4.5B for Chrysler

Hate to sound the pessimist, but everytime I read his name, I think KeVorkian.... as in the suicide doc. That would be bad for Chrysler. :D

If he's based in the US... I'm on his side! :usa:
 
Joined
Oct 2, 2000
Posts
2,381
Reaction score
0
Location
Saratoga,CA
Re: LOOKING GOOD: Kerkorian offers $4.5B for Chrysler

Hope -

1. Ownership comes back to America! Union-Management-investment group(KeV.. or other). :usa:
2. Lutz returns to run the new Chrysler-Dodge-Jeep. :2tu:
3. Wolfgang stays in the EU. :bonker:
4. Oreca takes Vipers back to LeMans. :headbang:

New Products:

1. A High End four door sedan to compete(beat performance and quality-sales will track with same) with Lexus. (They have the technology SRT product line great example of capability), just need the management to support the middle and lower management with automotive style and performance in their blood. And un-employ all in Sr. management positions who are not real automotive enthusiast, like lawyers running car or performance groups. ) :nana:

2. A High End Sports Car like the Firepower - with an automatic, SRT8 Hemi around 550-600HP, all wheel drive like the SRT8 Jeep and all the latest electronic features with a exotic interior of leather, carbon fiber, and titanium. Body of high strength composite or carbon fiber. This should take a big piece form the Caddy, and SL, hides. Should be as light as possible, as safe as possible, and as fast as possible. A great performance vehicle for our wives to drive to School. This Firepower would be a real winner in couple and rag top. Could also make a stretched version with a small back seat to complete with the two door Bently, Auston Martin, Porsche, etc. :headbang:

3. Develop Ethanol and Hydrogen powered cars to satisfy the desire to reduce our dependency on oil. We can grow a lot of corn in our heart. :usa: And corn crops do poorly in sand :curse: !
 

Photog1

Enthusiast
Joined
Sep 6, 2004
Posts
765
Reaction score
0
Location
Morton, Illinois
Re: LOOKING GOOD: Kerkorian offers $4.5B for Chrysler

Hope -

1. Ownership comes back to America! Union-Management-investment group(KeV.. or other). :usa:
2. Lutz returns to run the new Chrysler-Dodge-Jeep. :2tu:
3. Wolfgang stays in the EU. :bonker:
4. Oreca takes Vipers back to LeMans. :headbang:

New Products:

1. A High End four door sedan to compete(beat performance and quality-sales will track with same) with Lexus. (They have the technology SRT product line great example of capability), just need the management to support the middle and lower management with automotive style and performance in their blood. And un-employ all in Sr. management positions who are not real automotive enthusiast, like lawyers running car or performance groups. ) :nana:

2. A High End Sports Car like the Firepower - with an automatic, SRT8 Hemi around 550-600HP, all wheel drive like the SRT8 Jeep and all the latest electronic features with a exotic interior of leather, carbon fiber, and titanium. Body of high strength composite or carbon fiber. This should take a big piece form the Caddy, and SL, hides. Should be as light as possible, as safe as possible, and as fast as possible. A great performance vehicle for our wives to drive to School. This Firepower would be a real winner in couple and rag top. Could also make a stretched version with a small back seat to complete with the two door Bently, Auston Martin, Porsche, etc. :headbang:

3. Develop Ethanol and Hydrogen powered cars to satisfy the desire to reduce our dependency on oil. We can grow a lot of corn in our heart. :usa: And corn crops do poorly in sand :curse: !


Sounds like a great plan. I hated to see them kill the Firepower I saw it at VOI9 and thought that would make a great car for the wife only try and keep it around the 60K price tag. It would definitely give caddy and jag a run for their money. :2tu:
 

RMBSRT

Enthusiast
Joined
Mar 7, 2006
Posts
308
Reaction score
0
Location
TX
Re: LOOKING GOOD: Kerkorian offers $4.5B for Chrysler

Who are you kidding? Big "K" is a bottom line guy and the market is moving away from gas guzzlers. I am starting to think the 08 Viper will not make the cut...too easy for new management to cut the platform.

- Factory is already closed
- Small amount of parts on hand
- Add the platform cost to acquisition expense and write the Viper off....too easy.

Don’t give me the “Halo Car’ excuse…the next “Halo Car” will be something that gets 50 mpg!

Man I hope I am wrong….I want my 2008 Viper!!!
 

Photog1

Enthusiast
Joined
Sep 6, 2004
Posts
765
Reaction score
0
Location
Morton, Illinois
Re: LOOKING GOOD: Kerkorian offers $4.5B for Chrysler

Factory still closed???? I thought they were up and ready to start building the 08's. Suppose to hit showrooms this summer that is only a couple of months away. :confused:
 

InjectTheVenom

Enthusiast
Joined
Mar 10, 2004
Posts
6,859
Reaction score
0
Re: LOOKING GOOD: Kerkorian offers $4.5B for Chrysler

Hope -

1. Ownership comes back to America! Union-Management-investment group(KeV.. or other). :usa:
2. Lutz returns to run the new Chrysler-Dodge-Jeep. :2tu:
3. Wolfgang stays in the EU. :bonker:
4. Oreca takes Vipers back to LeMans. :headbang:

New Products:

1. A High End four door sedan to compete(beat performance and quality-sales will track with same) with Lexus. (They have the technology SRT product line great example of capability), just need the management to support the middle and lower management with automotive style and performance in their blood. And un-employ all in Sr. management positions who are not real automotive enthusiast, like lawyers running car or performance groups. ) :nana:

2. A High End Sports Car like the Firepower - with an automatic, SRT8 Hemi around 550-600HP, all wheel drive like the SRT8 Jeep and all the latest electronic features with a exotic interior of leather, carbon fiber, and titanium. Body of high strength composite or carbon fiber. This should take a big piece form the Caddy, and SL, hides. Should be as light as possible, as safe as possible, and as fast as possible. A great performance vehicle for our wives to drive to School. This Firepower would be a real winner in couple and rag top. Could also make a stretched version with a small back seat to complete with the two door Bently, Auston Martin, Porsche, etc. :headbang:

3. Develop Ethanol and Hydrogen powered cars to satisfy the desire to reduce our dependency on oil. We can grow a lot of corn in our heart. :usa: And corn crops do poorly in sand :curse: !


Sounds like a great plan. I hated to see them kill the Firepower I saw it at VOI9 and thought that would make a great car for the wife only try and keep it around the 60K price tag. It would definitely give caddy and jag a run for their money. :2tu:

ME 4-12!
 

MoparMan

Enthusiast
Joined
Apr 14, 2003
Posts
2,054
Reaction score
0
Location
Las Vegas, NV
Re: LOOKING GOOD: Kerkorian offers $4.5B for Chrysler

Who are you kidding? Big "K" is a bottom line guy and the market is moving away from gas guzzlers. I am starting to think the 08 Viper will not make the cut...too easy for new management to cut the platform.

- Factory is already closed
- Small amount of parts on hand
- Add the platform cost to acquisition expense and write the Viper off....too easy.

Don’t give me the “Halo Car’ excuse…the next “Halo Car” will be something that gets 50 mpg!

Man I hope I am wrong….I want my 2008 Viper!!!

Don't worry, there's been too much spent on NRE and other development costs to stop the production of the '08 Viper.
 

Yellow32

Enthusiast
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Posts
678
Reaction score
0
Location
texas
From:
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20070411.wrchrysler11/BNStory/Business/home

Posted AT 1:00 AM EDT ON APRIL 11 2007

Onex, Magna eye bid for Chrysler

Schwartz, Stronach preparing all-Canadian offer for car maker


BOYD ERMAN AND GREG KEENAN
From Wednesday's Globe and Mail

Two of Canada's most aggressive and successful businessmen, Gerald Schwartz of Onex Corp. and Frank Stronach of Magna International Inc., are working on a joint bid for all of money-losing auto maker Chrysler, according to people familiar with the sale process.

The rationale behind a Magna-Onex partnership is that Magna could bring its expertise to operating auto factories, while Onex could use its financial finesse to run Chrysler's credit arm, the sources said.

Onex could also bring a labour-friendly private equity face to the table — many unionized workers made big gains in the company's recent purchase of an aerospace company — in a negotiation where making a deal with unions to cut costs will be key.

The price that Magna and Onex would pay is unclear, according to the sources, who requested that their names not be used, though there have been suggestions that seller DaimlerChrysler AG wants to generate at least $8-billion (U.S.) from a sale. Any buyer would also have to find a way to deal with the massive pension and health liabilities that Chrysler will come with, estimated at more than $15-billion.

DaimlerChrysler put the unit up for sale amid shareholder discontent about the continuing losses since the $36-billion merger of Germany's Daimler and Detroit-based Chrysler in 1998.

Chrysler posted an operating loss of $1.5-billion last year after being sideswiped by a sudden and rapid rise in the price of gasoline, which sent sales of the company's pickup trucks and sport utility vehicles skidding.

The only offer that has been made public so far is a $4.5-billion cash offer from billionaire Kirk Kerkorian.

Investment bankers from JPMorgan Chase & Co. are running the sale process, and the sources said private equity firms Blackstone Group LP and Cerberus Capital Management LP are the other leading bidders.

Magna had also been rumoured to be working with a private equity partner, but the identity of the backer had not been revealed.

There had been speculation that Magna, one of the world's largest auto component makers, would not bid for the whole of Chrysler, but would rather aim for a partnership setup where the Canadian company would run plants and try to use its operational expertise to cut costs.

With Onex on side, a play for all of Chrysler becomes a possibility, the sources said. Onex has spent only about half of the $3.45-billion it raised in a private equity fund last year. Onex officials declined to comment on the possibility of a bid for Chrysler.

Magna could borrow as much as $7-billion to fund a bid, according to a recent report by Citigroup analyst Jon Rogers.

“Potential drivers for Magna's interest might include gaining more business from and solidifying its relationship with an important customer,” Mr. Rogers wrote.

Magna has refused to discuss its plans, other than via Mr. Stronach's public comments that Magna must get involved to protect its relationship with the auto maker, which generates about 15 per cent of Magna's annual revenue of $24.2-billion. Magna makes seats, trim parts, and suspension and engine components for virtually every Chrysler vehicle manufactured in North America, and actually builds cars for DaimlerChrysler at a plant in Austria.

A big hurdle will be making a deal with the auto maker's unions. The Canadian Auto Workers union and the United Auto Workers union have expressed their opposition to the sale of Chrysler.

They have also vocally criticized the prospect of a takeover of the company by private equity firms, because of concerns that a buyout firm will try to institute deep cost cuts.
CAW head Buzz Hargrove has met with Mr. Stronach to hear what the union leader called a “sketchy” outline of a Chrysler proposal.

In an interview yesterday, he reiterated that he prefers a sale to an industry player and he vowed to throw up obstacles to Mr. Kerkorian's bid.

“All I've done is send a message to folks that this is not going to be a cakewalk if people want to take our members' jobs,” Mr. Hargove said.

“He stands for everything that I'm opposed to,” Mr. Hargrove said of Mr. Kerkorian.
“He's made his money throwing a lot people out of work, made a lot of money for himself and a few executives at the expense of a lot of workers and their families over the years,” he added.

Onex, however, could point to the deal made with workers — many of whom belong to the UAW — at its Spirit AeroSystems unit.

Onex purchased Boeing Co.'s aircraft component plants in the U.S. Midwest, negotiated new labour agreements that cut the remaining workers in on gains in the value of the operation in return for wage and job reductions, then took the new company public as Spirit. Workers made out much better than anyone forecast — the average gain was expected to be about $30,000, but when shares in the IPO sold at a higher price than planned each worker ended up in line for about twice that much.

Mr. Hargrove and Mr. Schwartz also have a history of co-operation. In 1999, Mr. Hargrove backed Mr. Schwartz's failed bid to merge Air Canada and Canadian Airlines International Ltd.

Onex is no stranger to the auto parts business, either.

The firm had stakes during the 1990s in Automotive Industries Holding Inc. and Tower Automotive Inc. But Onex has at times run into trouble in the auto industry.
The company purchased J.L. French Automotive Castings in 1999, and invested $226-million (Canadian) in the company before it filed for bankruptcy protection during the downturn in the auto business.

Faceoff
A joint bid by Gerald Schwartz's Onex and Frank Stronach's Magna would pit two Canadian magnates against Tracinda Corp., led by Kirk Kerkorian, a billionaire investor from Beverly Hills. He has tabled a $4.5-billion (U.S.) bid for Chrysler. Also in the running are U.S. funds Blackstone Group and Cerberus Capital.

Kirk Kerkorian is a former pilot and amateur boxer who made his fortune building resorts in Las Vegas. He once held as much as 13 per cent of Chrysler Corp., before it was bought by Daimler for $38-billion (U.S.) in 1998. Last year, he owned as much as 10 per cent of General Motors.

Founded by Frank Stronach, Magna International makes car parts in Canada, Europe, Mexico, the United States and Britain.

Founded by Gerald Schwartz, Onex's subsidiaries make parts for planes and computers. They also build business jets and run health care facilities.

-J
 

Warfang

Enthusiast
Joined
Nov 27, 2004
Posts
6,912
Reaction score
0
Location
California, East Bay
"Rothbauer also said joining with Chrysler tainted the Mercedes image of quality."

Is this the same Mercedes that had nothing but electrical problems over the last 10 years and ranked below Hyundai in quality? Yeah... that's Chrysler's fault. :rolleyes:
 
Top