GM and Chrysler tomorrow reach the March 31 deadline, presented to them last December when they received many billions of dollars of taxpayer funds, for having a plan for viability. As was entirely predictable on the day they got the money, they have failed to do so. Here's one cheer for the Obama administration (who inherited this deal from their predecessors): they have at least recognized reality and admitted that GM and Chrysler are, to use the technical business jargon, totally hosed.
We live in an imperfect world. Given this, and based on a quick read, the Obama administration's statements about what they intend to do aren't that bad. In
regard to Chrysler, they've said they will provide operational
financing for 30 days, plus a $6 billion loan to support a merger or
quasi-merger with FIAT. If Chrysler has not made
a deal with FIAT by the end of April, they will have no more government
support, and presumably be reorganized. (How bad must it suck to be the Chrysler guys negotiating across the table from FIAT on that deal with a gun like that being held to your head?) In
regard to GM, the government will provide 60 days of operating
financing, and give them another shot at developing a plan for
viability. In effect, they get a two month stay of execution. If the
administration lives up to these words, we would have a temporary
intervention, but get out of the awful business of managing commercial
enterprises via government quickly.
I assume that it is not accidental that the Chrysler deadline will be reached prior to the GM deadline, and therefore further assume that the administration is actually either confident that they can make the deal work with FIAT, or failing that, that they really will let Chrysler go under. Chrysler may have to play Lehman to GM's Citigroup. (Awareness of this Chrysler-GM timing dynamic by all parties, of course, makes it even more fun for Chrysler to negotiate with FIAT).
In a couple of months we'll know a lot more about whether the administration intends to execute industrial policy for the auto industry, and if so, how.









