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German government approves Magna, Opel deal

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CTV.ca News Staff

Date: Fri. May. 29 2009 10:11 PM ET

The German government has approved a deal that would see a majority stake of General Motors' European division sold to Canadian auto parts maker Magna International Inc.

After a second round of high-level talks in Berlin, a deal was reached late Friday night, according to Germany's finance minister Peer Steinbrueck.

"A solution has been found to keep Opel running," Steinbrueck told reporters. "You can be sure that we did not take the decision lightly. All the federal and state representatives are aware there are some risks."

The agreement will see Adam Opel placed under the care of a trustee - expected to happen sometime Saturday. This would protect the German automaker from General Motor likely filing for bankruptcy protection early next week.

According to the Associated Press, Germany's federal government would pitch in a loan of US$2.1 billion to help smooth the deal, though it would have to be paid back later.

Under the terms outlined by the source, Magna would provide short-term financing in order to become the main contender.

Magna co-CEO Siegfried Wolf said he expects agreements with GM to be signed in five weeks time. But he added the deal struck early Saturday would prevent Opel from being touched by whatever will happen to GM.

"We really have taken the risk that was necessary to show a commitment, and we are committed, otherwise we wouldn't have done this deal," Wolf said.

Under the deal:

  • Magna will take a 20 per cent stake in Opel;
  • the Russian-owned Sberbank will take a 35 per cent stake, giving their consortium a majority;
  • GM will retain a 35 per cent holding; while
  • the remaining 10 per cent will go to Opel employees.

In Detroit, meanwhile, GM's bid for bankruptcy protection in the U.S. sent ripples through the European talks on Friday.

GM's attempt to achieve Chapter 11 status began to crystallize Thursday when a group of bondholders agreed to trade $27 billion in debt for stock -- a proposal sweetened by Washington.

While the developments with the bondholders looked like progress for the automakers' North American division, it was seen as troublesome for the European negotiations.

GM's continued requests for German funding to keep the European factories functioning, has resulted in a soured opinion of the deal, said BNN's Michael Kane.

"Now the German government is under pressure to actually just let the whole thing collapse and go into bankruptcy," Kane told CTV News Channel.

The fact that the parent company in Detroit is seeking bankruptcy -- and is under pressure to take the European division down with it -- only makes things more complicated, Kane said.

"The German government is saying 'wait a minute, you're going to go into bankruptcy protection with the big company, and then you're going to stick us with these European operations that are losing money as well? That's not cool,'" Kane said.

On top of all of that, Fiat's owner is in Montreal and was unable to attend the negotiations in Germany due to a previous engagement -- which Kane said some observers see as a boycott.

"So it's a situation where anything can happen and any transaction that does occur can change the look of everything else," he said.

GM's latest plan

GM's latest plan, outlined Friday in regulatory documents, would see the company enter a period of bankruptcy protection during which it would shed most of its debt, before emerging stronger and leaner.

At the other side, GM would be almost three-quarters owned by taxpayers, with the U.S. Treasury taking 72.5 per cent of stock.

The department has already invested $19.4 billion and would pour in $30 billion more to keep GM running during Chapter 11 -- which AP reports could last 60 to 90 days.

Ottawa is also expected to pump in an additional $9 billion and take a stake of the company, AP reports.

The United Auto Workers will end up with 17.5 per cent of the company.

As part of the restructuring 14 plants are expected to close, erasing 21,000 jobs, though details about which plants are on the chopping block aren't expected until Monday.

With files from The Associated Press

Comments are now closed for this story

Publlic Sector Employee
said
0 0

Let the CAW bashing begin!

Seriously, CAW haters, get over it allready.


Steve in Fredericton
said
0 0

Plenty of other options out there besides GM or Chrysler. I'm quite certain that I won't be buying any of their vehicles in the future, or anything made with UAW/CAW labour.

Time for auto workers to start earning a wage in line with the skill/education required to do their job.

The real unfortunate thing here is that the only people who will continue to benefit from a GM restructure will be the execs who will continue to rape the company. The bonuses alone for a single exec could be paid in salary to keep 50 workers on the line in a factory.


Just my opion !!
said
0 0

Not that the union workers took a small pay cut. (LOL) Now the public should know how much pay cuts the top guys are taking, before our hard earned tax dollars are given to these losing companies, Or, are they buying bigger homes and cottages with the publics dollars.


MK from NS
said
0 0

well i guess now that they are going to file for chapter 11 that we will never see the new Camaro.


Blythe Ponsonby Smythe Pickering.
said
0 0

How did we get to this ! with the fabulous uplander and the G5,unbelievable !


Samual
said
0 0

Great news!!!
Now if they get rid of the union, drastically cut managment salaries & cut wages in half from their new deal.
Then & only then GM might have a chance.



Canada Goose Whistler
said
0 0

I'm really sick of hearing about this. The big USA showing the world how capitalism works.
Doesn't the government own most businesses in the communist countries.
So sad government is so stupid throwing away billions of dollars to save a handful of jobs.
Look forward to huge tax increases under USA & Canada's new communist governments.


GUTSHOT!! in Thunderous Bay
said
0 0

and you guys thought supporting them was gonna be expensive for us all.

to quote Randy Bachman..

Bbbbaby, You aint seen nothing yet


C.T.
said
0 0

To the autoworker union memeber who is unwilling to make concessions regarding wage: I have 2 questions for you.

If you were to lose your job at General Motors because of bankruptcy do you think you can find another job that pays close to what you are/have been making at GM?

With your current job description and skill set in mind, do you believe there are jobs that you can get and still earn a similar rate of pay like at GM?

Just curious.



Raj - Ottawa
said
0 0

Awesome!

There is no other way.


Ian Ottawa
said
0 0

What an evil web this has ballooned into.


Need to buy more TIME & MONEY
said
0 0

We know for sure that General Motor will bounce back.

As for the mean while, they need more TIME and CASH FLOW in order to suvive.

For the U.S. side, Obama is becoming THEIR BOSS! Harper will have no choice but to follow him!

In not, our unemployment rate will go beyong 10% which is more than 50BILLION DOLLARS negative!

YES, IT'S A GLOABAL RECESSION. HANG IN TIGHT EVERYBODY, IT will soon be OVER WITH!


Nancy:
said
0 0

A technical overview of the terms used:

Warrants are a right to buy stock at a certain price. Bonds are just loans. Preferred Stock usually gets a dividend before voting common stock but the preferred does not get a vote. A union is a collective organization that does not represent the collective interest of society but pushes a socialist agenda and usually ruins and industry in the long term with stikes and wage demands that make the company uncompetitive,

The President and CEO the chief excutive officer are over paid the board of directors is reports to the shareholders and agrees to big cheques for the fat cats as long as they can get in on it and give away investors money to the excutives instead of limiting it to profit.

The tax payer gives the Auto companies money but can't expect free floor mats or a tank of gas. The municipal Goverment is the level of Government that screws you for as much as $50. a day to park the thing or says take the subway but can't make the trains run on time.

China and India two countries that build cars cheap because they run coal fired plants for cheap energy to the companies and have a cheap work force and a government that will not let our products in to their markets, the ships go back with our money and coal. Males stupid enough to pay high costs for sports cars, extra insurance and gas as long as it has 500 horse power when the speed limit is 110 kilometres an hour or less. A Minivan the only thing that seats more than 5 people in North America that every family owns.


LAL
said
0 0

The fact that GM shareholders are now faced with same apprehension that their blue collar counterparts have been exposed to for the last decade makes me all warm and fuzzy inside.

These insatiable, over-indulgent gluttons are getting their just desserts by receiving next to nothing for their investments after refusing to negotiate terms to prevent the company from tanking. Say what you will about the union workers. They made concessions(along with management)that would have provided some relief in assisting the company. The shareholders refused to budge.

10% of nothing is nothing. Take that to the bank.


Jonathan
said
0 0

As a Canadian Tax Payer, I am a little concerned about the stake we will receive. I have read that the Canadian and US governments will own 75% of the company, and this article states that the US Treasury will own 72.5%. That will leave Canada with only 2.5%. Assuming that the US Treasury is getting 72.5% on an investment of 50 Billion, we seem to be getting the short end of the stick as a proportional share would yeild 2.5% of the shares on 1.25 billion....and we put a lot more than that into GM, and plan to commit another 9 billion. Am I missing something?


Maggie
said
0 0

Notwithstanding they are a huge company, HOW long have they been working on this? Now as usual it's down to the wire. I hope this is the final final deadline. Bye-bye GM. Good riddance. I hope you have learned the bitter lesson not to ever again let the arrogant unions push you around and tell you how to run your company, look where their insatiable greed has left all of us.


Jonathan
said
0 0

Actually, when you add up the percentages Canada gets nothing on our Tax payer investment:

The U.S. Treasury would get 72.5 per cent of the new company's stock.

A United Auto Workers trust that will take over retiree health care expenses will get 17.5 per cent, and the old GM, effectively owned by the bondholders, would get a 10 per cent stake.

That adds up to 100%. Why are we giving billions to a company that will be owned by the US Treasury?


leaner and stronger ??
said
0 0

What is proping up the Gm price to 1.12 on the exchange ??? this should now be penny stock , as the shareholders will get the shaft while the bondholders and the unions come out ok.

And why is it when a company like Gm goes into bankruptcy, it comes out "leaner and stronger " in the the eyes of the busniess world, yet if you or I declare it on ourselves we are looked upon as leppers by the banks and credit companies???

Quite the double standard...too bad the bondholders didn't say "liquidate" and have GM collapse and save my tax money.....


Sparky
said
0 0

Just get it over with. All talk no action.


C.T.
said
0 0

Auto Industry:
CNNMoney.com reports, entry level pay is now $14 an hour, half of what it used to be.

It used to be $28/hour to start!!??!! To start!!

And people wonder why the North American auto industry is going the way of the dodo!

Unbelievable.



MikeP
said
0 0

There are two problems in this situation.

First, GM was too chicken to tell the CAW to take a hike whith their outlandish demands because they were afraid of a strike by these abusers.

Secondly, the CAW union is totally responsible for using blackmail tactics at the contract negociations every two or three years.

Remember that the CAW played the game to the fullest by alternating companies of the big three to obtain all their heart desired and of course the other two followed suit.



Dave in Perth
said
0 0

It's a loan, it will be paid back. Remember when you GM and auto union supporter types were screaming this every time we said "not with my tax money? Now do you get it? Our tax money is GONE as we knew it would be. It will never be paid back and now we own a stake in a worthless company.

Thanks CAW, after your unbelievable sacrifices, the pain you have had to endure we end up where we knew it would. See you all in the UIC line up, oh wait that's right my benefits have almost expired, oh well good luck you're gonna need it.


J.W.
said
0 0

Management is part of the blame with bad planning and poor vehicle design/reliability over the years but one of there many bad decisions where continuing giving into union groups come contract time.

Am a supplier to these companies and looking like may not be working come Tuesday. For years we have give price reductions yearly to GM(%4-8/year) and lots of suppliers already bankrupt cause of this. Meanwhile car prices increased, management got raises/bonuses and unions got more perks.

Did the CAW or UAW give price reductions every year on there overall wage?

If you wonder why your property taxes keep going up it is because they all go to groups who are UNIONIZED! They want more and more every year driving taxpayers into debt.

Gone are the days of rich/middle/poverty class now it's union and non-union class.


Al
said
0 0

This should scare the crap out of the competition, GM has closed the quality gap while carrying huge debt, and now they will emerge with lower labour costs and much less debt.They have excellent new peoduct in the pipeline, and hopefully a new focus on their core market. With the right leadership, they will quickly right the ship.


C.T.
said
0 0

The problem is that Auto Industry management allowed the union to acquire too much control in the running of the company. You effectively have unqualified people (union) having too much of a say or impact on running a company. The union memebers are not business minded people. They are "bleed as much as I can from the company with no regard to the future" minded people.

Management’s mistake was allowing the unions to get that power. The unions’ mistake is not recognizing that they are not qualified, do not have the tools or education and don not know the first thing about running a company.

The union are the architects of their own demise.


Simon in Toronto
said
0 0

I am quite certain that one of the plants on the chopping block is the one in Oshawa, perhaps even all of Canadian assembly plants. Several latest developments point at it. Next week will be very interesting.


Jeremy
said
0 0

my 2007 grand prix caught on fire just last week it had a full warranty guess what gm did for me.... nothing thats what i'll never buy gm again the company is burning just like my car i hope no one puts out the flames


Roger T
said
0 0

It's not chapter 11 bankruptcy protection for GM - ITS BANKRUPTED.

There is no turning back fro GM as no one is buying their junk that's sitting on the lots all around GTA.

Any companies that want to buy a piece of a failed and BANKRUPTED business is just likely to put themselves in a failure position. Once a brand is tarnish consumers will avoid it.

Game over - end of the road!


bill
said
0 0

If USA is getting 72.5% of GM for 49..4 billion then why isn't Canada getting at least 6 or 7% for its contribution??


mine
said
0 0

Agree with C.T.


Bill
said
0 0

I am not a Caw/Uaw fan but their wages seem paltry compared to the $384,000 a year Ontario is paying the woman to head up the agency converting paper records to electronic for Ohip!!!!
She must be a rocket scientist!!??


m hanna
said
0 0

to g.t.---you are correct-the caw did get greedy but they weren't the only ones.back in the glory years high management personell and executives were awarding themselves outrageous bonuses in the tens of millions of dollars instead of responsibly running the corporation...as in putting that wealth away for a rainy day etc.the union saw this and simply demanded that their membership got a cut also...or a lengthy strike...the company drunk with wealth simply concurred (they had no reason not to) and this one of the reasons for the slow downward spiral that has put them where they are now...


Autoworker
said
0 0

C.T

We were not asked to take pay cuts from the company or the government.
they want us to keep our rate of pay so we are in a higher tax bracket that means more mmoney in taxes.

go figure


Glen in Ottawa
said
0 0

Why doesn't the government take the cash they are going to flush and the properties that were used as collateral for previous "loans" and invest in a made in Canada car company with the same arrangements with workers as Toyota and Honda, union free and decent wages. I think a much better outcome would occur.


DaveEast
said
0 0

Hey, Germany is the first government to start to get it. STOP THROWING MONEY AT THIS. It's NOT your money, and no doubt the market will nicely fill the void left by the departing GM and Chrysler.

All the billions of our tax dollars did no good, did not stop the bankruptcy protection, will not get the consumers to buy this crap from shakey companies with out-of-touch management and embittered employees, and will only serve to mortgage our great-grankids' futures to save a few union jobs. Let's face it, even with this untold wealth thrown at the auto problem, people everywhere are losing their jobs in this sector. Nothing will change that, and voters truly resent this "prop-it-up" mentality.

Time for common sense to rule and for GM and Chrysler to fade away before they do even MORE damage to the economy than they already have.


Dave in Ontario
said
0 0

I don't know why GM did not sell off Opel and SAAB a long time ago . Ford was smart & sold off Aston Martin , Jagaur & Land Rover years ago . The GM Empire is
about to crash .


Autoworker
said
0 0

Simon in Toronto

We are getting 2 new cars in Oshawa A new Caddy and a Buick regal along with the new Camaro. thats 3 for now
If you go to the GM dealers and try and buy a Truck you have a 3 to 4 month wait time. so why would GM stop building trucks in Oshawa? even after we won Award after Award for our Trucks built here in Oshawa. even won an Award for the truck the very last day we built one here. it tells me that its Quanity not Quality they want.


MAL
said
0 0

No more CAW bashing... it doesn't exist anymore. A union with no members employed is not a Union, so I guess they're the CFAW now [Canadian Ford Auto Workers].

Close GM and Chrysler, sell it to the workers. Give them the same government money as the companies were going to get and let's make some Canadian cars.

And besides, these are not LOANS... they are grants no matter what is said. There is no Lee Iaccoca to show up in Ottawa in 3 years with a payback check.


Shanna
said
0 0

This is what happens when an arrogant, overpaid bunch of bolt-turners think they know how to manage a company. Toodle-oo, GM.


Kelly
said
0 0

Now CAW is threatening to cut off sports funding for little kids if their parents cut the grass so they can play while Windsor city workers are on strike, calling the parents "scabs". Well, CAW is the scab in the armpit of society.


Shamaro
said
0 0

To tell you the truth, I don't think this is really going to be a good thing for Magna International.

Though Magna is a Canadian Parts manufacturer and one of the largest in the world, many of Magna's senior execs are European and if any one has ever worked within Magna, there are those who are employee's and then there are those who are German or Austrian.

Magna here in Canada is suffering, but Magna once again is off in Europe expanding it's business there, where the auto industry is in just as bad of shape and they are leaving their North American portion of the business, to fend for themselves.




GARY GRAHAM
said
0 0

YES, EVERYBODY DOWN ON THE UNIONS BUT A FEW GUYS AT TOP ARE GOING TO BENEFIT HANDSOMELY WITH HUGH PAYOUTS DESPITE COMPANY HEADED FOR BANKRUPTCY AS THEIR CONTRACTS IRONCLAD,SOMEBODY SHOULD STOP ALL THAT NONSENSE AND LET THEM START TO EARN THEIR WAGES JUST LIKE THE RANK AND FILE.


honda_man HFX
said
0 0

What's a GM "peoduct"?
Whatever it is I ain't buying one!

(Roger T, always enjoy your posts : )


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