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Judge OKs Sale of Most Chrysler Assets to Fiat

By BREE FOWLER
,
AP
posted: 179 DAYS 15 HOURS AGO
Text SizeAAA
NEW YORK (June 1) - A federal bankruptcy judge late Sunday approved the sale of most of Chrysler's assets to Italy's Fiat, moving the American automaker a step closer to its goal of a quick exit from court protection.
Judge Arthur Gonzalez said in his ruling that a speedy sale — the centerpiece of a restructuring plan backed by President Barack Obama's automotive task force — was needed to keep the value of Chrysler from deteriorating and would provide a better return for the company's stakeholders than if it had chosen to liquidate.
"Any material delay would result in substantial costs in several areas, including the amounts required to restart the operations, loss of skilled workers, loss of suppliers and dealers who could be forced to go out of business in the interim, and the erosion of consumer confidence," Gonzalez wrote in his opinion.
"In addition, delay may vitiate several vital agreements negotiated amongst the debtors and various constituents."
As a result, the proposed sale must be approved in order to preserve the value of Chrysler's business and what is ultimately left for its stakeholders, Gonzalez said.
Chrysler has maintained that selling the bulk of its assets to Fiat Group SpA is the only way it can avoid selling itself off piece by piece. If a deal does not close by June 15, the Italian automaker has the option of pulling out.
But a trio of Indiana state pension and constructions funds, which own $42.5 million of Chrysler's $6.9 billion in secured debt, aggressively objected to the sale, saying that it does not provide a big enough return for secured debt holders, while paying off unsecured stakeholders, such as the United Auto Workers union.
The Indiana funds bought their debt in July 2008 for 43 cents on the dollar. Their attorneys have said they would appeal the decision to U.S. District Court if Gonzalez approved the sale.
As part of Chrysler's government-backed restructuring plan, a UAW trust that will provide health care for hourly Chrysler retirees will receive a 55 percent stake in the new company, while Fiat will get a 20 percent stake that can ultimately grow to 35 percent. The remaining 10 percent of the company will be owned by the U.S. and Canadian governments.
In the days leading up to Chrysler's Chapter 11 filing, the automaker struck a deal with the majority of secured lenders to give them $2 billion in cash, or 29 cents on the dollar, to erase the $6.9 billion in debt. But some of the debtholders balked and the automaker was forced to file for bankruptcy protection on April 30.
Besides the Indiana funds, a group of over 300 Chrysler dealers slated to lose their franchises under the company's restructuring also objected to the sale. A separate hearing to address Chrysler motion to terminate 789 franchises is scheduled for Wednesday.
Objections were also filed by the automaker's suppliers, former employees and people with product-related claims against the company.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. Active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
2009-06-01 07:22:41
COMMENTS ( 6 )
Page 1 of 2 1 2 Next >>
Drcranes
10:32PM Jun 1 2009 
Let's keep putt'n' everyone in jail for bad checks and THEN we will catch the real crooks! NOT ! GIMME MONEY!! OBAMA !!! I'll show you how to build cars without a union. And do it right with style. Can You Say HEMI ? Did'nt think so ../. OH YA you like America to build YOGO"s Get a Camel and Ride Captain Ride...
I'm so sick of this that I no longer send UPS because of the Teamsters Union.
Follow me Boys???
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VDema26408
12:02PM Jun 1 2009 
This is an old Italian proverb related to the combination of Chrysler,Fiat,and the US Government: "My friends,thank you for joining the party,but,please bear in mind our past record: Alone we are nothing. But together,we are a failure." What a better use for taxpayer money. Another example of out elected representatives spinning Gold into straw.
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VDema26408
11:55AM Jun 1 2009 
Welcome to the new "Great Society",phase 1,produced and directed by the great Democrat LBJ,threw Billions into their version of the great political "Black Hole". We now have phase 2,produced by the New Democratic National Socialist Party,led by Mr. Obama who has recently directed TRILLIONS into their version of the "Political Black Hole". Will someone please tell us in detail where the money has gone. At the last calculation,it appears that the cost of "creating" one new additional government job is about 500 Thousand dollars! If he is going to create 3-5 Million government jobs,the next question is do they get paid before the country enters chapter 11? Welcome to the "who gets screwed next club".
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Goatboyee99
7:52AM Apr 30 2009 
my dad was a test driver of the the then "amazing" Chrysler Turbine car in the early 60's. This vehicle ran on any combustible fuel and produced very few emissions comparitively speaking. Chrysler should just break-away from the pack and start focusing on making an alternative energy compatible vehicle with the size and features and PRICE that everyone wants and they will NOT need any mote loans..Those Chrysler Execs know ******** all about sales and demand...and we don't have much in the way of those going on right now..If they make a car that just looks so good and runs so good and cheap, that people just can't wait any longer...Then your problems will solved quickly...Need a consultant Chrysler??? I'm available...cheap...Non-Union even!...
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RIOMECH
7:52AM Apr 30 2009 
Don't be greedy? Who owns the shares in the hedge funds that stand to loose billions? The union and private retirement funds. Spin the bottle and see who gets kissed.
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