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Obama's Losing Bet on Detroit
Townhall.com ^ | April 2, 2009 | Steve Chapman

Posted on 04/02/2009 5:18:19 AM PDT by Kaslin

If you had bought $1,000 worth of General Motors stock in 2000, your holdings would now be worth less than $40, for a loss of 96 percent. You could have made worse investments in that period -- with Bernard Madoff, for one -- but not many.

So anyone looking to participate in a viable business would look a lot of other places before they would look there. But the United States government thinks GM might just be a really smart place to put its money.

In its final weeks, the Bush administration lent the automaker $13.4 billion, along with $4 billion for Chrysler. On Monday, President Obama gave GM 60 days to come up with a better plan before deciding whether to sink more cash into it. But he placed a large bet on its survival by promising to guarantee all GM and Chrysler vehicle warranties.

He also held out a shimmering vision of the Big Rock Candy Mountain, expressing faith that his policies can lead to "a 21st-century auto industry that is creating new jobs, unleashing new prosperity, and manufacturing the fuel-efficient cars and trucks that will carry us towards an energy-independent future."

Truth is, that industry already exists. The Big Three just don't happen to be a part of it. The United States has robust, job-creating, fuel-efficient automakers, in the form of companies like Toyota, Honda and Subaru.

But they don't count in the eyes of this president, presumably because their employees don't belong to the United Auto Workers union. So he apparently couldn't care less how much they resemble what he fantasizes GM and Chrysler will soon become.

And a fantasy it is. On what basis could anyone expect GM or Chrysler to achieve greatness? It's like expecting a glacier to appear in Phoenix. Just because it happened a long time ago doesn't mean it's going to happen again anytime soon, if ever.

At one time, GM accounted for 60 percent of the cars sold in America, but its market share has fallen to 22 percent. It has lost money for four straight years, including a staggering $31 billion in 2008, and things are only getting worse. Sales in February 2009 were less than half what they were in February 2008.

Chrysler has not exactly set the world on fire either. It torched $8 billion last year. Some of its investors now value their stakes at pennies on the dollar -- or nothing. Its U.S. sales have plunged by nearly half over the last decade. In this year's Consumer Reports rankings of the 10 worst cars, seven are GM or Chrysler products.

The administration's own industry task force doesn't share Obama's unbounded optimism. In a report released this week, it noted that GM's supposed salvation, the plug-in hybrid Chevrolet Volt, "will likely be too expensive to be commercially successful in the short term."

It ridiculed GM's own cheery forecast, which assumes rising profits "despite a severely distressed market, lingering consumer quality perceptions and an increase in smaller vehicles (where the company has previously struggled to maintain pricing power)." Even under generous assumptions, it said, GM would keep losing money.

Given all these sad tidings, it's hard to avoid the conclusion that the only hope is bankruptcy court -- where it could shed some of its obligations by stiffing creditors and rewriting union contracts. Obama seems to think the auto industry is too important to be subjected to such an indignity, though he has not ruled it out.

But to survive in the long run, a company has to provide consumers with products they want at a price that yields healthy profits. That is exactly what GM, like Chrysler, has consistently been unable to do.

In those circumstances, neither bankruptcy nor any other course offers a plausible route to prosperity. Plausibility, however, is not a consideration among politicians determined to keep the Big Three in business no matter what.

In recent months, we've been told that ambitious federal action is needed in the financial sector because unregulated commerce produced disastrously perverse results. But in the auto industry, competition has functioned reliably to reward sound companies and penalize bad ones. So clearly, there are only two occasions for massive government intervention: when the market fails, and when it works.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Editorial; Government; US: Michigan
KEYWORDS: automakers; bho44; everheardofkeywords; everheardoftopics; michigan

1 posted on 04/02/2009 5:18:19 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin
Karl Denninger thinks it's inside baseball at GM:

GM: Bankrupt, UNLESS....

"So in this case the winning play, if you're a big bondholder, is to tell GM to suck eggs; you'll get paid 100 cents on your CDS even though AIG has no money, because the taxpayer will make you whole on those CDS, even if the bonds have a recovery in bankruptcy."

2 posted on 04/02/2009 5:29:18 AM PDT by an amused spectator (Obama: The Kenyan Anthony Fremont)
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To: Kaslin

Part of the automobile industry’s problem is the Federal government’s insistence that it build cars that please the government. Under Obama, this is going to get much worse. My guess is that General Motors, formerly an automotive giant and the first modern American corporation, will go the way of British Leyland.


3 posted on 04/02/2009 5:33:53 AM PDT by popdonnelly (The greatest crimes in history have been perpetrated by governments. You've been warned.)
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To: an amused spectator
Truth is, that industry already exists. The Big Three just don't happen to be a part of it. The United States has robust, job-creating, fuel-efficient automakers, in the form of companies like Toyota, Honda and Subaru.

This is the truth that Zero's administration and his lap-dogs in the MSM won't report.

Okay, I confess, my last GM product was a 1979 Cutlass I bought new. After 3 months I was determined it was the last. My next car was a 1981 Honda... and I haven't been back...

4 posted on 04/02/2009 5:34:16 AM PDT by Lurking in Kansas (Never argue with an idiot. They drag you down their level, then beat you with experience.)
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To: Lurking in Kansas
I got a Ford hunk of junk with an imploding head gasket that Ford flipped me off over, and Chrysler stopped making my wife's favorite car because it was "too big" (bigger than a shoe box on roller skates).

I love my Camry...

5 posted on 04/02/2009 5:41:21 AM PDT by an amused spectator (Obama: The Kenyan Anthony Fremont)
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To: Kaslin
GM's future is in the past.
6 posted on 04/02/2009 5:45:43 AM PDT by SERKIT ("Blazing Saddles" explains it all.....)
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To: an amused spectator

Try one of these.
7 posted on 04/02/2009 6:01:29 AM PDT by ex91B10 (This Space Available! Great Rates!)
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To: Kaslin

Obama has no constitutional or regulatory authority to warranty cars.

Why spend $30 billion on an enterprise presently worth only $3 billion??

It doesn’t take being an economist to figure that one out.


8 posted on 04/02/2009 6:13:37 AM PDT by bestintxas (It's great in Texas)
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To: Springman; sergeantdave; cyclotic; netmilsmom; RatsDawg; PGalt; FreedomHammer; queenkathy; ...
Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

If you would like to be added or dropped from the Michigan ping list, please freepmail me.

9 posted on 04/02/2009 6:13:45 AM PDT by grellis (I am Jill's overwhelming sense of disgust.)
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To: Kaslin
If you had bought $1,000 worth of General Motors stock in 2000, your holdings would now be worth less than $40, for a loss of 96 percent.

If you had bought $1000 worth of GM just 4 days ago, it would be worth $500 at the close yesterday.

10 posted on 04/02/2009 6:17:26 AM PDT by Kent C
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To: Kaslin

I think my next car is going to be Japanese.


11 posted on 04/02/2009 6:19:48 AM PDT by Tribune7 (Obama wants to put the same crowd that ran Fannie Mae in charge of health care)
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To: Kaslin
Chrysler is a private company -- not a public one -- and its private owners do not feel it is worth one more penny of their own money. However, Obama, The One, thinks US taxpayers (suckers) should funnel money into this loser.
12 posted on 04/02/2009 6:26:01 AM PDT by JoeGar
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To: Kaslin

I understand Madoff investors may eventually get 5% on the dollar. that is BETTER than GM stock....


13 posted on 04/02/2009 6:28:44 AM PDT by PGR88
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To: AdmSmith; Berosus; Convert from ECUSA; dervish; Ernest_at_the_Beach; Fred Nerks; george76; ...
Thanks grellis.
On Monday, President Obama gave GM 60 days to come up with a better plan before deciding whether to sink more cash into it. But he placed a large bet on its survival by promising to guarantee all GM and Chrysler vehicle warranties. He also held out a shimmering vision of the Big Rock Candy Mountain, expressing faith that his policies can lead to "a 21st-century auto industry that is creating new jobs, unleashing new prosperity, and manufacturing the fuel-efficient cars and trucks that will carry us towards an energy-independent future."
..."but just in case"...
Obama bows down to Saudi King | American Thinker | April 02, 2009 | Clarice Feldman | Posted on 04/02/2009 8:19:47 AM PDT by rdb3

14 posted on 04/02/2009 3:59:51 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/____________________ Profile updated Monday, January 12, 2009)
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GM: Basic Chart for GEN MOTORS - Yahoo! Finance
52 week high $29.28, low $1.70 (which it hit late last month).
15 posted on 04/02/2009 4:01:00 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/____________________ Profile updated Monday, January 12, 2009)
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