Updated: Tuesday, 02 Dec 2008, 11:37 AM EST
Published : Tuesday, 02 Dec 2008, 11:37 AM EST
Washington (AP) - Ford Motor Co. is asking Congress for a $9 billion loan as a "backstop" to keep it from running short of cash in 2009, but says it doesn't expect to need the money. Unless one of Detroit's other Big Three auto companies goes bust, Ford expects to have enough money to make it through next year, it said in a plan that projected the firm will break even or turn a pretax profit in 2011.
Detroit's automakers, making a second bid for $25 billion in
funding, are presenting Congress with plans Tuesday to restructure
their ailing companies and provide assurances that the funding will
help them survive and thrive.
General Motors Corp., Ford and Chrysler LLC said they would
refinance their companies' debt, cut executive pay, seek
concessions from workers and find other ways of reviving their
staggering companies.
The Big Three executives also are offering a series of
mostly symbolic moves to burnish their images, badly tattered after
they arrived in Washington D.C. last month on three separate
privatejets to plead for a federal lifeline for their struggling
companies.
Ford CEO Alan Mulally said he'd work for $1 per year if his
firm had to take any government loan money. The company's plan also
says it will cancel all management employees' 2009 bonuses, scrap
merit increases for its North American salaried employees next
year, and sell its five corporate aircraft.
And for this week's round of congressional hearings on the
auto bailout, all three company chiefs will skip the lavish travel
arrangements. Mulally is coming by car from Detroit for this week's
second round of congressional hearings on government help for
the Big Three. GM Chief Rick Wagoner will drive a Chevrolet Malibu
hybrid sedan for the 520-mile trek from Detroit to Capitol Hill,
spokesman Tony Cervone said Tuesday. And Chrysler LLC CEO Robert
Nardelli won't travel by corporate jet, but a spokeswoman declined
to elaborate on his travel plans, citing security reasons.
The unions were preparing to make sacrifices as well. UAW
leaders summoned local union leaders from across the country to an
emergency meeting Wednesday in Detroit to discuss concessions the
union could make to help auto companies get government loans.
U.S. automakers are struggling to stay afloat heading into 2009 under the weight of an economic meltdown, the worst auto sales in decades and a tight credit market. General Motors, Ford and Chrysler went through nearly $18 billion in cash reserves during the last quarter, and GM and Chrysler have said they could collapse in weeks.
Top executives from the Big Three failed last month to
convince a skeptical Congress that they were worthy of $25 billion
in loans. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and Senate Majority
Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., ordered them to outline major changes,
including the elimination of lavish executive pay packages and
assurances that taxpayers would be reimbursed for the loans.
All three companies are filing separate plans. Congressional
hearings are planned for Thursday and Friday. "I believe the
industry will make a compelling case for bridgeloans that will
allow the companies to return to firm financial footing," said Sen.
Carl Levin, D-Mich.
GM will outline efforts to negotiate swapping some of the
company's debt for equity stakes in the automaker, either shares or
warrants for them, said two people briefed on the company's plan.
With eight separate brands, GM will also discuss efforts to
shed brands but it would prefer to sell them instead of shutting
down Pontiac, Saturn or Saab, said one of the people briefed on the
plan. Killing off brands, like GM did with Oldsmobile in 2004,
would require cash the company doesn't have, the person said. The
people briefed on GM's preparations didn't want to be identified
because the plan hadn't been completed.
(Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press. All Rights
Reserved.)
APTV 12-02-08 1122EST