General Motors Corp is in preliminary talks with Cerberus Capital Management LP’s Chrysler LLC about a possible merger or other partnership, a person familiar with the talks said.
The talks are very early and it’s not clear whether they will result in any agreement, the person said, who asked not to be named because the discussions are private.
The New York Times reported the talks on Friday and said Cerberus is also holding talks with automakers including Nissan Motor Co and Renault SA, citing unidentified people.
Cerberus spokesman Peter Duda did not return phone calls. Chrysler spokeswoman Shawn Morgan had no immediate comment. GM spokesman Tony Cervone also had no comment.
GM, which hasn’t made money since 2004, and Chrysler, which has said it won’t be profitable this year, are under pressure to cut costs and increase liquidity as US auto sales have fallen to the lowest level since 1991 and the credit crunch, touched off by the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers Holding Holdings Inc, is making it harder for customers and dealers to get loans.
Cerberus said last month that it was trying to buy the 19.9 percent of Chrysler that is still owned by Daimler AG.
Chrysler LLC said on Sept. 25 it would fire about 250 employees as part of a plan to eliminate 1,000 salaried positions by the end of last month.
Daimler wrote down the value of its Chrysler stake from US$1.2 billion at the end of last year to US$231 million at the end of June as the automaker’s fortunes declined.
Chrysler, which isn’t required to report financial information, has said it won’t be profitable this year. The company said that through June, it earned US$1.1 billion before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization.
Standard & Poor’s analyst Robert Schulz said on Friday that GM, Ford Motor Co and Chrysler may be forced into bankruptcy as the global credit freeze damps US sales.
“Macro factors could overwhelm them at some point” even as GM, Ford and Chrysler vow to stick with their turnaround plans, Schulz, Standard & Poor’s lead automotive credit analyst, said in a Bloomberg Television interview in New York.
The companies said they have no plans to seek bankruptcy protection.
With all three companies working to boost cash, any bankruptcy filing would be a last resort, not a “strategic” decision, Schulz said.
“We don’t see that as something they would choose,” he said.
Schulz said the “trigger” for a forced restructuring under bankruptcy protection would be based on the automakers’ ability to preserve liquidity as sales decline. Industrywide US sales slid 27 percent last month, the most in 17 years.
“With auto sales stalled in the US and beginning to contract in the rest of the world, we believe GM’s cash needs are increasing,” Barclays Capital analyst Brian Johnson in Chicago wrote in a note on Friday. “Moreover, the downside risk of greater decline in worldwide auto sales driving greater cash needs is increasing.”
EARLY TALKS: Measures under consideration include convincing allies to match US curbs, further restricting exports of AI chips or GPUs, and blocking Chinese investments US President Donald Trump’s administration is sketching out tougher versions of US semiconductor curbs and pressuring key allies to escalate their restrictions on China’s chip industry, an early indication the new US president plans to expand efforts that began under former US president Joe Biden to limit Beijing’s technological prowess. Trump officials recently met with their Japanese and Dutch counterparts about restricting Tokyo Electron Ltd and ASML Holding NV engineers from maintaining semiconductor gear in China, people familiar with the matter said. The aim, which was also a priority for Biden, is to see key allies match China curbs the US
The popular Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) arbitrage trade might soon see a change in dynamics that could affect the trading of the US listing versus the local one. And for anyone who wants to monetize the elevated premium, Goldman Sachs Group Inc highlights potential trades. A note from the bank’s sales desk published on Friday said that demand for TSMC’s Taipei-traded stock could rise as Taiwan’s regulator is considering an amendment to local exchange-traded funds’ (ETFs) ownership. The changes, which could come in the first half of this year, could push up the current 30 percent single-stock weight limit
PROTECTION: The investigation, which takes aim at exporters such as Canada, Germany and Brazil, came days after Trump unveiled tariff hikes on steel and aluminum products US President Donald Trump on Saturday ordered a probe into potential tariffs on lumber imports — a move threatening to stoke trade tensions — while also pushing for a domestic supply boost. Trump signed an executive order instructing US Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick to begin an investigation “to determine the effects on the national security of imports of timber, lumber and their derivative products.” The study might result in new tariffs being imposed, which would pile on top of existing levies. The investigation takes aim at exporters like Canada, Germany and Brazil, with White House officials earlier accusing these economies of
Teleperformance SE, the largest call-center operator in the world, is rolling out an artificial intelligence (AI) system that softens English-speaking Indian workers’ accents in real time in a move the company claims would make them more understandable. The technology, called accent translation, coupled with background noise cancelation, is being deployed in call centers in India, where workers provide customer support to some of Teleperformance’s international clients. The company provides outsourced customer support and content moderation to global companies including Apple Inc, ByteDance Ltd’s (字節跳動) TikTok and Samsung Electronics Co Ltd. “When you have an Indian agent on the line, sometimes it’s hard