The economic collapse of the USA and therefore the rest of 'the world as we know it' seems inevitable. It's not a matter of if, but of when. Increasingly that 'when' looks likely to be this northern hemisphere winter.
The global financial system has been held together by string and sticky plasters for some years now and finally the hens appear to be coming home to roost... Only another war is going to get George W. Bush and his cronies out of the coming major recession, maybe! Or then again it could be deliberate "demand destruction" to mitigate against Peak Oil and Climate Change, to protect the investments, money and power of the global financial elites.
Whatever it is it's going to be a wild ride....
Hang on tight
TR
Below is taken from FTWs news post on 11th October 2005
http://www.fromthewilderness.com/free/ww3/101105_world_stories.shtml#0
[China pulls very few punches here and this public statement about Beijing’s tea leaf reading pulls few punches. It was kind of them to estimate a collapse in a year or two instead of right now. Had they said right now it might have started a dollar run before China could liquidate holdings at the top of the bubble. Now, before the winter cold hits and energy shortages become more than an inconvenience, the two key signs we should watch for are a Chapter 11 filing by GM (likely) and any moves by other countries to liquidate dollar holdings.
Critics
and skeptics are quite right that a Chapter 11 filing is
only for reorganization. But it would also allow GM – if
the courts permit it – to dump all of their pension
obligations off on the US Treasury and the Pension Benefit
Guaranty Corporation which is already insolvent. Don’t
think of the damage caused by weakened GM shares. Think of
what happens when millions of pension checks stop flowing.
At least two airlines (Delta and Northwest) are dancing
around that same move right now. –
MCR]
It's time to
take seriously a US-led global recession
By Lau Nai-keung
2005-10-06
07:37
China Daily
http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/english/doc/2005-10/06/content_482807.htm
In accordance with Title 17
U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without
profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in
receiving the included information for research and
educational purposes.
I think it is time that we
should take a serious look at the possibility that the US
is going to take us down towards a worldwide recession in
one or two year's time.
It
is well known that the US is the world's biggest economy,
taking up about 30 per cent of global GDP, but it is now
also the world's biggest debtor country. According to the
most authoritative person on this subject, the US
Comptroller General David Walker, who audits the federal
government's books, the tab for the long-term promises the
US Government has made to creditors, retirees, veterans and
the poor amounts to US$43,000 billion, US$145,000 per US
citizen, or US$350,000 for every full-time worker.
And this figure does not even take into account all the
personal debts such as credit card bills and mortgages.
With a low interest rate of 1 per cent running for the past
three years in a row, savings plummeted to just 1.8 per
cent last year, below 1 per cent since January and at zero
in the latest estimate from the Bureau of Economic
Analysis. In 2000, household debt broke 18 per cent of
disposable income for the first time in 20 years. Credit
card debt alone averages US$7,200 per household.
The US Government indebtedness is financed this way: The US
now runs a trade deficit roughly 6.5 per cent of its GDP
and the gap is widened every day. Its citizens are spending
ever more on foreign goods, and with the US dollar as the
international currency, the US Government just prints money
to finance the deficit. And with this money, central banks
in the surplus countries purchase most of the US Treasury
bonds as currency reserve.
By now, Japan is the largest creditor of the US Government,
and the Chinese mainland has been a fervent buyer for the
last few years. As for Hong Kong, most if not all of our
reserves are in US dollar denominated assets. The US
Government in turn uses this foreign borrowed money to
finance as much as 90 per cent of the federal deficit which
stood at US$412 billion last year. The federal deficit is
expected to be running at about US$2 billion a day at the
moment.
Put it simply, the Americans have been living way beyond
their means for much too long. On top of this, the Bush
Administration is cutting tax at least three times while
fighting an expensive war in Iraq, which has already cost
the country US$700 billion, and currently progressing at
US$5.6 billion per month. Now the US economy is dependent
on the central banks of Japan, China and other nations to
invest in US Treasuries and keep American interest rates
down. The low rates keep American consumers snapping up
imported goods.
Any economist worth his salt knows that this situation is
unsustainable. This includes the country's economic guru
driver Alan Greenspan, who recently warned his countrymen
that the federal budget deficit would hamper the nation's
ability to absorb possible shocks from the soaring trade
deficit and the housing boom. Now he may have to add two
more worries: soaring oil prices and cyclones.
The US is now clearly in huge trouble, economically,
socially, politically, and internationally. The Bush
Administration bungled big in cyclone Katrina's aftermath
in New Orleans, and then a minor rerun from Rita in
Houston, and this will trigger the general outburst of
people's dissatisfaction with the government, leading to
great internal turmoil lasting for many years. In all
likelihood, long-term interest rates are going to rise, and
the greatest property bubble the world has witnessed is
going to burst in the next one to two years.
The countdown is in progress, and there is no way that
anybody can do anything to reverse it either by short-term
measures such as fiscal and monetary policy, or through
long-term reform of tax policy, entitlement programmes and
even the entire federal budget. This is as inevitable as
gravity, and it will take place under a new and
inexperienced chairman of the Federal Reserve Board. I do
not want to sound alarmist, but I see very bad omens.
To make things simple, let us just examine some key
economic issues raised by some economists:
What if the dollar plummets? Do stocks follow? How about
pensions?
What if interest rates soar? How would all the new
homeowners, who stretched to buy with adjustable and
interest-only loans, cover their mortgages?
How would consumers with record credit-card debt make their
payments? Would they stop buying? Stop taking vacations?
What will happen if they go bankrupt? New rules going into
effect later this year make it harder on such debtors.
How would a government, which depends on the taxes of a
strong economy to operate, keep all its promises?
To us, the good news is that when the country is in deep
trouble, the US will not have the energy to pick on China.
Even when it is necessary to start another war to divert
people's attention, it would pick one much smaller in size
and weaker in strength, like Iran. This will provide a much
more amicable environment for China to make good use of its
"period of strategic opportunity" till 2020 for the country
to pass through a turbulent zone between per capita income
of US$1,000-3,000.
But in the short term, now the US not only sneezes, and all
symptoms indicate that it is going to suffer from a
SARS-like trouble, the whole world should take extra
precaution not to get infected. One thing is for sure, some
time in the not too distant future, every central bank and
institutional investor is going to dump US dollar and US
Treasury bonds. Once, when a country like South Korea dumps
the dollar, the still unsold US Treasuries in the asset
column of Asian central banks - US$2,000 billion according
to some estimates - will collapse. The cheapened dollar
will cause a sudden jump in the US inflation, which forces
the Fed to jack up interest rates. A giant leap in
inflation will cause a severe recession, or perhaps a
depression, in the US. These countries' exports to America
will dry up, which in turn will spread the global economic
downturn like wildfire.
After the stampede, everybody is going to get hurt, not
least the central bank of China, and the Hong Kong Monetary
Authority, which are major US creditors and with the US as
their number one export market. The recent currency reform
of the RMB is most timely, and it is about time we should
do something about the Hong Kong dollar. At the same time,
China should make extra efforts to rekindle internal
consumption, and diversify its market really fast before
the great US bubble bursts.
(HK Edition
10/06/2005 page2)
[It
still looks like the US economy is headed for a major crash
this winter as we’ve been saying all year. The fourth
quarter is only eight days old and we have yet to be told,
or to feel, the full impact of the hurricanes on energy
production while politicians and business writers talk only
about refineries instead of the massive rig and pipeline
destruction that they conveniently omit from their
coverage. Lesser-noticed stories are now talking about ten
years before full Gulf production is restored and then they
are shy about stating that full production will ever be
restored. The new refinery bill, jammed through the House
yesterday, will have no impact for at least ten years. It
will hand out a lot of money to oil companies and ease
their operating costs. The new bankruptcy law, passed this
summer and much harder on both corporations and individuals
will take effect on October 17 th and it’s now beginning to
look like GM may file for Chapter 11 before the 17 th
also.
Recently
the US Department of Justice raised questions as to whether
GM’s pension funds were solvent and disputed GM’s
accounting. A corporate bankruptcy lawyer recently told me
that GM is probably planning on entering Chapter 11 before
the 17 th so that it might dump its pension obligations on
the Pension Benefit Guarantee Corporation (PBGC). What the
press won’t tell you is that the PBGC has been insolvent
for almost two years. We reported that to you in “Crossing
the Rubicon”. The first casualties of the crash will be
major pension funds. After that the mutual funds will start
showing weakness. Then the floodgates will open as the
energy realities start to hit home for all of us with the
winter cold.
There
are two key tipping moments that should start the big crash
this winter. The first key moment is the October 17 th
start date for the new bankruptcy laws. The second key
moment will arrive with this winter’s cold. The US is
currently in the grace period when summer heat has
diminished and the cold has not begun. We already know that
natural gas and heating oil prices are soaring. I’m not
saying it’s certain that GM will file before the 17th but
if it were me, I’d bet on it. Remember the old saying,
“As
goes GM, so goes the nation.”
It’s
also likely that we’ll see several major companies file
before the 17 th as well. – MCR]
Delphi files
for bankruptcy
By David Bailey
Sat Oct 8, 8:52
PM ET
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20051009/bs_nm/autos_delphi_bankruptcy_dc
In accordance with Title 17
U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without
profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in
receiving the included information for research and
educational purposes.
Auto-parts maker Delphi Corp.
(NYSE:DPH - news) filed for bankruptcy on Saturday, hurt by
high wage and benefit costs. It was the biggest bankruptcy
filing in U.S. automotive history and promises to have a
broad impact across the industry.
The largest U.S. auto parts supplier, as expected, filed
for Chapter 11 protection in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in New
York. Subsidiaries outside the United States were not
included.
The Troy, Michigan-based company has struggled since it was
spun off from former parent General Motors Corp. (NYSE:GM -
news) in 1999, posting net losses of $741 million in the
first half of 2005 alone. It had sought financing from GM
and sharp cuts in wages and benefits from the United Auto
Workers union to restructure unprofitable U.S. operations.
The Chapter 11 filing for reorganization potentially allows
steep cuts in wages, benefits and jobs to go forward
without the UAW's approval, marking a big setback for the
trade union. The filing is also likely to deepen financial
woes at GM, which shares many of the problems that drove
Delphi into Chapter 11.
"We
are going to be taking a hard look at every line of
business," Delphi Chief Executive Steve Miller
said.
Delphi
, which makes almost every component found on a car, has
about 185,000 employees worldwide. It has about 50,600
employees in the United States, including 25,200
represented by the UAW.
Recent UAW reports that Delphi proposed cutting wages by
more than half to $10 or $12 per hour were "directionally
correct," Miller said.
'A SIGNIFICANT REDUCTION'
"I've
been saying from day one that we need to be competitive
with other suppliers or we will simply go out of business,"
Miller said.
He
spoke of "a significant reduction" in U.S. employment but
declined to be specific.
Delphi 's filing listed assets of $17.1 billion as of
August 31 and debts totaling $22.17 billion. It had revenue
of $28.6 billion in 2004, including $12.7 billion from GM
in North America.
The parts maker said it expects substantial cuts in its
U.S. manufacturing operations. It plans to finance
operations with $4.5 billion in debt facilities, plus other
financing lines.
Delphi has arranged for $2 billion of debtor-in-possession
financing from a group of lenders led by Citigroup Inc.
(NYSE:C - news) and JPMorgan Chase & Co. (NYSE:JPM -
news).
Delphi 's bankruptcy is among the 15 largest since 1980,
based on rankings on the BankruptcyData.com Web site.
Delphi said it plans to emerge from bankruptcy in early to
mid-2007, after substantially cutting U.S. manufacturing
operations and modifying labor agreements to reduce wages
and benefits.
Under terms of its spinoff, GM may be liable for pension
and retiree benefits for UAW workers at Delphi, though
analyst forecasts of the cost to GM have varied broadly in
the range of billions of dollars.
IMPACT ON GM UNWELCOME
Analyst David Healy of Burnham Securities said GM will
probably continue to get parts from Delphi on time, but the
bankruptcy's financial impact on the automaker "should run
into several billion dollars."
"It's
not going to kill GM, but it's certainly not welcome,"
Healy said.
GM
said the Delphi restructuring could "create operating and
financial risks for GM," but added that the filing did not
necessarily make it liable for post-retirement health-care
and pension benefits for Delphi employees.
The range of exposure extends from potentially no material
impact if guarantees are not triggered to $10 billion to
$11 billion at the high end, with amounts closer to the
midpoint more possible than either end, GM said in a
statement.
The UAW called the filing "an extremely bitter pill."
UAW Vice President Dick Shoemaker noted that just a day
before the filing, Delphi increased severance packages for
21 top executives, citing a need to make them more
competitive.
"It's
another classic example where 'uncompetitive' means that
those people at the highest level get more, those that
aren't fortunate to be at the highest levels get less,"
Shoemaker said.
Delphi
hired Miller, a turnaround specialist, as chief executive
and chairman in July with an aim of restructuring outside
bankruptcy with the help of GM and the UAW. However, the
transaction proved too complex, Miller said.
Bankruptcy law allows a debtor to seek the rejection of
labor contracts and impose wage and benefit cuts, but in
most cases issues are resolved before a company asks a
judge to take that step, said Miller. He previously served
as nonexecutive chairman at bankrupt auto parts maker
Federal-Mogul Corp. (OTC BB:FDMLQ.OB - news) and as chief
executive of Bethlehem Steel.
The filing tops out a rocky year for Delphi, which probed
accounting improprieties that forced out its former chief
financial officer and five other executives and led to
financial restatements and probes by federal regulators.
Delphi is the third large U.S. parts supplier to file for
bankruptcy protection in 2005. Auto interiors producer
Collins & Aikman Corp. (Other OTC:CKCRQ - news) filed
in May and auto-body frames producer Tower Automotive Inc.
(Other OTC:TWRAQ - news) filed in February.
(Additional
reporting by Ilaina Jonas in New York and Poornima Gupta in
Detroit)
Copyright ©
2005 Reuters Limited.
As Delphi
Goes, So Goes G.M.?
By MICHELINE MAYNARD
October
11, 2005
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/10/11/business/11delphi.html
In accordance with Title 17
U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without
profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in
receiving the included information for research and
educational purposes.
Watch out Detroit, you could be
next.
That is the warning for domestic automakers from Robert S.
Miller Jr., the straight-talking chief executive of Delphi,
who took his company, the nation's biggest maker of auto
parts, into bankruptcy protection last weekend.
In an interview on Monday with reporters and editors at The
New York Times, Mr. Miller, who uses Steve as a first name,
predicted that General Motors and the Ford Motor Company
could find themselves following Delphi into bankruptcy
court in the next few years unless they take drastic steps
to reduce their own labor costs. Mr. Miller said his
company would do what it could to prevent more bankruptcies
in the industry.
But Mr. Miller, sounding like the Oracle of Delphi, made
clear that he believed that the major auto companies were
now engulfed in the same industrial turbulence that had
forced the revamping of the steel and airline industries
with which he was intimately familiar.
"This
is not just a Delphi issue, this is an auto industry
issue," Mr. Miller said, "and has to be dealt with" by
G.M., Ford and Chrysler, a division of DaimlerChrysler. "I
am very concerned about what happens to the Big Three. It
is an incredible watershed for the entire industry as we
head into the future."
Given
Mr. Miller's track record at companies like Bethlehem
Steel, Morrison-Knudson and Federal-Mogul and his status as
a director at UAL, the parent of United Airlines, his words
need to be heard, said Michael Useem, a professor at the
Wharton School of Business at the University of
Pennsylvania.
"If he
has concluded the problems of Delphi are endemic to the
industry," Mr. Useem said, "that would say, 'pay
attention.' "
Mr.
Miller vowed to inflict "minimal collateral damage" on G.M.
"We need them as a customer," he said. "I shudder at the
thought that the collapse of Delphi would trigger the
collapse of G.M," adding that he did not think G.M. was in
imminent danger of bankruptcy.
But Mr. Miller made it clear that Delphi would shrink
severely. He said that by the end of the bankruptcy, the
company, which has annual sales of about $28 billion a
year, could end up with around $20 billion. He cautioned
that the figure was only a rough estimate.
Most in danger are plants producing basic parts that can be
built more cheaply overseas, he said, while Delphi wants to
protect those that make complex components like instrument
panels and electronic systems.
Delphi, a division of G.M. until 1999, sought bankruptcy
protection in federal court in New York on Saturday, in the
largest Chapter 11 filing in the history of the automobile
industry.
G.M. represents roughly half of Delphi's business, and
about 4,000 Delphi workers have the right to return to
G.M., meaning that the company would be responsible for
their wages and benefits, including pension and health care
costs, on top of its own liabilities.
G.M. has estimated that its cost from a Delphi bankruptcy
could be as much as $11 billion. Today, G.M. shares fell
$2.81, to $25.48, in the first day of trading after the
filing.
Delphi's decision to seek bankruptcy protection came after
the company held weeks of negotiations on a rescue plan
with both G.M. and the United Automobile Workers union,
which represents 34,000 workers at Delphi plants in the
United States.
On Saturday, the union's president, Ron Gettelfinger,
denounced Delphi's move as an "extremely bitter pill" and
vowed to protect workers' interests. Mr. Miller, however,
said he believed that U.A.W. officials would be realistic
about the problems he faced in turning Delphi around.
"The
union knows that life is changing and all we've been
debating is at what speed do these changes take place," Mr.
Miller said.
The
Delphi situation puts intense pressure on G.M. to win cuts
from the U.A.W. in the next set of contract talks,
scheduled for 2007. "If they come to a contract that is the
same as they have now, they're finished," Mr. Miller said.
That makes the result at Delphi even more critical, said
Martin King, an auto industry analyst with Standard &
Poor's. Yesterday, S.& P. cut its rating on Delphi's
debt to D for default.
"This
is a unique event," Mr. King said of Delphi. "It's clearly
going to have implications for companies other than
Delphi."
In
one nod to the U.A.W., Mr. Miller said Delphi would not
seek emergency pay and benefit cuts, called interim relief,
which bankruptcy law allows if a company can prove it
cannot survive otherwise.
Instead, Mr. Miller said Delphi would try to negotiate cuts
with the U.A.W. before asking a judge for permission to set
aside union contracts and impose lower wage and benefit
rates.
Over the weekend, Delphi said that it wanted to conclude
those discussions by mid-December. Otherwise, the company
is prepared to ask that contracts be terminated and seek a
court hearing by mid-January.
If no deal can be reached, a judge can impose the cuts, and
the U.A.W. can strike at Delphi. But Mr. Miller said he did
not believe U.A.W. officials would allow that.
"I
believe they are realistic and responsible people and they
do not want to risk the chaos that will come from
rejection," Mr. Miller said. A spokesman for the U.A.W. did
not return calls seeking comment.
Nearly
every union at airlines that have filed for bankruptcy this
decade agreed to wage and benefit cuts, rather than have
them imposed. Once in bankruptcy, many companies also move
to terminate their retirement plans and replace them with
less-generous programs, a step taken by United Airlines and
US Airways.
On Monday, Mr. Miller said he intended to work with the
union to try to preserve Delphi's pension plan, which like
those at the American auto companies is severely
underfunded.
But Mr. Miller made it clear that U.A.W. members - whose
compensation is worth $65 an hour including wages and
benefits such as pensions and health care - would have to
give up something else to keep their plans. He also said
that any deal must ensure Delphi's eventual profitability
to enable the company to survive over the long run.
Delphi officials say they may aim for wages and benefits of
$20 to $25 an hour, similar to what is paid at other parts
makers in the United States.
Mr. Miller said that in bankruptcy, Delphi would be able to
sharply reduce a big contribution to its pension plans that
is coming due next year.
Before it filed for bankruptcy, Delphi said that it would
have to put $1.1 billion into its employee pension fund in
June 2006; it has borrowed money for that purpose. But Mr.
Miller said that he believed the bankruptcy code allowed
Delphi to reduce the size of the contribution to $160
million. The remaining $1 billion "can be paid later," he
said. He said he expected no objection from the lenders. It
was not clear, however, whether federal regulators would
accept that approach. By law, companies that promise
pensions are required to set aside enough money to pay
them, following a predetermined schedule. Skipping or
unilaterally reducing pension contributions can sometimes
bring on an enforcement action.
In the end, Mr. Miller said, the U.A.W., led by Mr.
Gettelfinger, faces some difficult choices trying to do the
best it can for current workers and retirees.
"If
the union says, 'No, I don't want to give on wages and
benefits' and we come to some kind of compromise where we
are breakeven instead of profitable, then you can kiss the
pension plan goodbye," Mr. Miller said.
"This
is a trade-off," Mr. Miller said, "not because I wanted to
put Ron Gettelfinger on the hot seat. He is on the hot
seat. I can't solve it. I can't protect what everyone wants
to have."
Mary
Williams Walsh contributed reporting from New York for this
article.
When
Bankruptcy Becomes Personal
By Michelle Singletary
Sunday,
October 9, 2005; F02
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/
2005/10/09/AR2005100900062.html
In accordance with Title 17
U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without
profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in
receiving the included information for research and
educational purposes.
If you're overwhelmingly in
debt, you are not alone.
If you're screening every telephone call to avoid dealing
with your creditors, you are not alone.
If you've finally decided to file for bankruptcy
protection, you are not alone.
On that last point, perhaps it will ease your shame to know
that bankruptcy filings for the period from April 1 to June
30 of this year were the highest in history for a single
quarter, up 11 percent, according to the Administrative
Office of the U.S. Courts.
The overall quarterly increase was fueled by consumer
Chapter 7 filings, which rose 17.7 percent, to 362,481 from
308,028, for the second quarter of 2004. Under Chapter 7, a
person's assets are liquidated, except those exempted by
law, and debts are wiped away. Such cases are usually
simple. The average filer doesn't even appear before a
judge.
This recent surge in bankruptcy petitions is largely
attributable to consumers scrambling to file before the
new, tougher Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer
Protection Act of 2005 takes effect Oct. 17.
"We
are having a spike in filings such as I have never seen in
23 years of practicing bankruptcy law," said Kevin C.
Gleason, an attorney from Hollywood,
Fla.
How tough is
the new law? Debtors will be required to get credit
counseling before filing. They will have to pass a means
test in order to file under Chapter 7. Otherwise, they must
file under Chapter 13, which requires debtors to pay back
some of their debt over a five-year period. Overall,
debtors will be scrutinized much more closely than before.
With the new law approaching, I thought it was appropriate
to recommend for the Color of Money Book Club "Surviving
Personal Bankruptcy: Your Guide to the Personal, Legal, and
Financial Issues" by Nora Raum (Gotham Books, $20).
This isn't so much a how-to book but a primer on the
bankruptcy process. Raum describes the ideal bankruptcy
candidate and lays out alternatives to declaring yourself
broke. The book also includes the latest changes in the
bankruptcy law.
Remember, I told you you're not alone. Raum opens most
chapters with stories of the rich and famous who have filed
for bankruptcy. For example, did you know Burt Reynolds
filed for bankruptcy? Milton S. Hershey, the chocolate bar
king and the man responsible for my spreading hips, went
bankrupt -- twice. Tammy "Stand By Your Man" Wynette filed
for bankruptcy. Talk show host Larry King also filed.
"Bankruptcy is a mystery to
most people," writes Raum, who has practiced law for nearly
20 years, specializing in personal bankruptcy. "They hear
the word now and then, usually in connection with some huge
corporation. But they have no idea what it means to people
like them. They need basic information to help them decide
if bankruptcy might be right for them."
So
how do you know if you may need to consider bankruptcy?
Here are some telling signs, according to Raum:
• You
have no idea how much you owe. "A client will tell me in
the initial interview that she has around $20,000 in credit
card bills," Raum writes. "But when everything is added up,
that figure will sometimes be close to twice that amount.
People don't really want to know how dire their situation
is."
• You have too many credit cards. "Nobody needs three
credit cards from Capital One," she says.
• You write checks when you know you don't have the money
in the bank.
• You're hiding debt from your spouse. "If you're rushing
to pick up the mail before your wife can get to it, you
already know you're in trouble," Raum says.
It
helps that Raum is an attorney. She sprinkles the book with
firsthand knowledge of how the system works. There's a
useful checklist of questions to ask during your meeting
with an attorney. There's a section on pre-bankruptcy do's
and don'ts. For example, if you're about to file for
bankruptcy, don't even think about making last-minute
charges on those credit cards you should have cut up long
ago.
Overall, this is an easy read for a hard life-decision.
Michelle
Singletary discusses personal finance Tuesdays on NPR's
"Day to Day" program and online at
http://www.npr.org.
GM stock
tumbles on Delphi news
Bankruptcy
filing punishes GM stock, Delphi securities as investors
scramble for the exits.
October 10, 2005: 12:34 PM
EDT
http://money.cnn.com/2005/10/10/news/delphi_gm/index.htm
In accordance with Title 17
U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without
profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in
receiving the included information for research and
educational purposes.
NEW YORK (CNN/Money) - General
Motors stock tumbled Monday along with Delphi Corp. stock
and bonds on news that the auto parts maker had filed for
bankruptcy over the weekend.
Delphi , the nation's biggest auto parts maker,
filed for
protection under Chapter 11 of the federal
bankruptcy laws Saturday after warning for months that a
filing was likely. In Chapter 11, a company is protected
from creditors while it works out a plan to reorganize and
pay its debts.
GM
(down $1.29 to
$27.00, Research)
shares sank about 5 percent in early trading on the New
York Stock Exchange.
GM, which spun off Delphi in 1999, may be on the hook for
pensions and benefits of Delphi employees that could total
as much as $11 billion, the automaker said in a statement
over the weekend.
Meanwhile, Delphi
(down $0.64 to
$0.48, Research)
shares tumbled as well, losing about half their value in
morning trading after a delayed opening.
Delphi bonds also tumbled in Monday over-the-counter
trading, Reuters reported.
Bondholders often get just a fraction of their original
investment when a company reorganizes in bankruptcy while
shareholders are usually wiped out.
Delphi's bankruptcy filing was the biggest in U.S.
automotive history and promises to have a broad impact
across the industry.
For example, the chances that GM will have to file for
bankruptcy are now up to about 30 percent, according to one
industry analyst, following the Delphi bankruptcy filing.
( Full
story).
The analyst, Rod Tadross at Banc of America Securities,
estimated that GM's retirement liabilities are now up to
about $6 a share, as the automaker warned it could be on
the hook for up to $11 billion in contract obligations to
its former employees at Delphi. ( Full
story).
Delphi, based in Troy, Mich., has struggled since it was
spun off from former parent General Motors in 1999, posting
net losses of $741 million in the first half of 2005 alone.
( Full
story).
Another auto parts supplier,
Dana, also took a hit from an accounting
scandal.
A Doozie of a
Recession
By Stephen Pizzo, News for
Real
Posted on October 5, 2005, Printed on October 11,
2005
http://www.alternet.org/story/26406/
In accordance with Title 17
U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without
profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in
receiving the included information for research and
educational purposes.
Of course George W. Bush will
blame it all on the war and two hurricanes. In fact, it's a
direct result of his own flawed economic policies and the
"borrow and spend" lifestyle he sparked, not only within
government, but consumers as well.
I am referring to the looming recession. It's going to be a
doozie. And it has begun, as it always does, when consumers
suddenly discover they can no longer keep pace with their
bills.
That would have happened a couple of years ago already, had
it not been for the housing bubble. Like all bubbles it was
ordinary folk who eagerly fueled the Ponzi, an inverted
pyramid sure to topple once it became top-heavy. As with
all previous bubbles, everyone crushed by that inevitable
collapse figured they were too smart to get caught by it.
They figured they'd be well out of Dodge with the booty
long before that happened.
So they bought homes bigger than they needed, and each time
rates dropped or prices jumped in their area they
refinanced, pulling a bit more booty out each time; for a
pool, landscaping, or a new car. They had time. The
economists said there was no bubble, prices were going up
because of natural demand, not speculation. And so they
stayed in Dodge. They let it ride, they let it all ride on
successive spins of the wheel of fortune.
But now the hot housing market has begun to cool. Prices in
the hottest markets have flattened. Houses listed for sale
have grown as those who waited too long rush to cash in.
Days on the market are marching upward as buyers become
increasingly scarce.
That's only one indication that the end is near for George
W. Bush's phony recovery -- a "recovery" bought with tax
cuts he cannot repeat, and with consumer spending fueled by
borrowed money, which is no longer available. Hell,
consumers may not even be able to make good on the money
they've already borrowed. The indicators indicate that is
so:
The percentage of overdue US credit card accounts jumped to
a record in the second quarter as gasoline prices surged,
the American Bankers Association said. Consumers had more
trouble making payments on personal, auto and home-equity
loans during the three-month span, the bankers group said.
Delinquencies on these loans, collectively, rose to 2.22
percent from a revised 2.03 percent in the prior quarter,
the group said. Delinquencies on home-equity loans
increased to 2.75 percent of all such loans, up from a
revised 2.61 percent. Delinquency rates for indirect auto
loans, which are made by auto dealers and held by banks,
increased to 2.08 percent from 1.87 percent the previous
quarter. Those for direct auto loans gained to 2.07 percent
from 2.04 percent.
This is a particularly bad time for consumers to be tapped
out. It comes at the beginning of the holiday spending
season which can account for nearly half of many retailers
income for the year. It comes just as gasoline prices reach
European levels, hitting low-wage workers hardest,
especially if they have to commute to work. It comes just
as the first chills of winter begin spreading south from
Canada and as heating oil and natural gas prices spiral to
unheard-of highs.
Here's where it starts:
Credit Card
Minimum Payments on the Rise
San Diego, CA (PRWEB) October
4, 2005 -- The minimum payments that credit card companies
charge on a monthly basis are increasing. For credit card
customers that either pay their bill in full every month or
those that can afford substantially more than the minimum,
this isn't going to be an issue and could even be benefit
to them. For the approximately 40 million people that only
pay the minimum, however, this could be devastating.
When the recession can no longer be denied, the President
will blame it on 9/11, the war he started, the hurricanes
and the disruption in energy production they caused. Like
Michael Brown, he will blame everyone and everything, but
himself.
But we know.
Stephen
Pizzo is the author of numerous books, including "Inside
Job: The Looting of America's Savings and Loans," which was
nominated for a Pulitzer.