Delphi files for bankruptcy

thoughtone

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Associated Press
Updated: 1:02 p.m. ET Oct. 8, 2005

DETROIT - Delphi Corp., the largest U.S. auto supplier, filed for bankruptcy Saturday, sending shock waves through the nation's auto industry, which already is weakened by high labor costs and falling market share.

The company's bankruptcy is one of the largest in the country's history.

Delphi filed to reorganize its U.S. operations in federal bankruptcy court in New York, where hearings are scheduled to begin next week. Delphi's non-U.S. operations were not included in the filing.

Delphi Chairman and CEO Robert S. Miller said the company hopes to emerge from Chapter 11 in early to mid-2007.

"We will make every effort to make this as quick as possible," Miller told The Associated Press on Saturday.

Negotiations with GM, UAW
Miller, a restructuring expert who was hired in July, had threatened to take the company into bankruptcy if he failed to reach a restructuring agreement with Delphi's former parent, General Motors Corp., and its largest union, the United Auto Workers. Miller set a deadline of Oct. 17, when U.S. bankruptcy laws are scheduled to change.

Miller said Delphi will continue negotiating with GM and the UAW to lower its labor costs. Miller said the three parties agreed to continue their discussions after a bankruptcy filing.

"We mutually concluded there was still too much of the complex work yet to be done," Miller said. "It was not going to be efficient to work right up to the midnight deadline to the change in the law."

Miller said nothing will change immediately. Delphi will continue to pay its 50,000 U.S. employees and suppliers and will ship its products on schedule. Delphi has 31 plants in 13 states, including Michigan, Ohio, Alabama and California. The company has 185,000 employees worldwide.

"We are not going to adversely affect our customers," he said. "Our people will get their pay checks and will still have their health benefits. Retirees will continue to get their checks. Any changes to that will be dealt with in an orderly way."

Struggle since spin off
Delphi will finance its operations with $4.5 billion in loans, including up to $2 billion in debtor-in-possession financing from a group of lenders led by JPMorgan Chase Bank and Citigroup Global Markets Inc.

Delphi, based in the Detroit suburb of Troy, has struggled to make a profit since GM spun it off in 1999. It lost $4.8 billion in 2004 and nearly $750 million in the first half of this year.

Delphi had $16.5 billion in total assets as of June 30, the most recent figure available, and has total debt of $6 billion, Standard & Poor's said Thursday. The company had $4.3 billion in unfunded pension liabilities at the end of 2004, according to a company filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

The largest corporate bankruptcy in the U.S. was WorldCom Inc., which had $103.9 billion in pre-bankruptcy assets.

Like Tower Automotive Inc. and other auto suppliers who have recently declared bankruptcy, Delphi has struggled with the high cost of steel and other raw materials as well as U.S. production cuts.

Labor woes
But Delphi also blamed its spinoff agreement with GM for saddling it with high labor costs. Under the agreement, Delphi is required to pay GM wages of $27 an hour to most of its 24,000 UAW-represented workers. That's double the level of competing suppliers, according to Standard & Poor's Ratings Services. Delphi also had to pay full wages and benefits to 4,000 laid-off workers in jobs banks, which cost it $400 million each year.

Delphi has a total of 30,000 U.S. hourly employees and 12,000 hourly retirees. About 6,000 hourly employees are represented by other unions, including the International Union of Electronic Workers/Communications Workers of America.

Under a bankruptcy filing, Delphi could shift at least some of its pension liabilities to the federal government's Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp. and could get the court to order lower wages and benefits for the UAW and higher costs for its parts.

Under the spinoff agreement, GM also is liable for some of Delphi's pension obligations if Delphi is in bankruptcy. In a note to investors, Merrill Lynch analyst John Casesa said GM could be liable for $4.4 billion to $6.7 billion worth of pension and health care benefits.

Delphi and GM have been tightlipped about the negotiations. But a letter sent from UAW leaders to union members in Kokomo, Ind., earlier this week said Delphi asked the UAW to accept wage cuts of more than 50 percent, to $10-$12 an hour, and eliminate the jobs bank. Delphi also called for a reduction in health care benefits and vacation time.

Delphi also has been plagued by an accounting scandal that the FBI and the SEC are now investigating. Six people have resigned because of the investigation, including Delphi's former Chief Financial Officer Alan Dawes.

Notice the accounting scandal is at the bottom of the post. Will the board work for $1 while restructuring the company? Corporations always blame the lowly worker for their problems, they never admit to making bad decisions. This is why the rich have gotten richer under Bush and the middle class is just keeping pace.
 

Greed

Star
Registered
thoughtone said:
This is why the rich have gotten richer under Bush and the middle class is just keeping pace.
thankfully all we have to do is wait until bush get out of office then corporations will be honest again like they were before him.

thanks for that ray of hope thoughtone.
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
<font size="5"><center>Delphi bankruptcy could mean a new era for auto industry, unions</font size></center>

Detroit Free Press
October 9, 2005, 4:29 PM

Delphi Corp.'s bankruptcy could change the face of the U.S. auto industry, ratcheting up the pressure to produce cheaper auto parts overseas and forcing unprecedented cuts in union wages and benefits, industry analysts and autoworkers said Sunday.

Delphi, the largest U.S. auto supplier, filed for bankruptcy Saturday and is expected to slash jobs and wages and close many of its 31 U.S. plants as part of its reorganization. General Motors Corp., Delphi's largest customer and former parent, said it might have to assume up to $11 billion in retirement benefits for Delphi's union-represented employees.

But the ripple effects won't end there. Delphi has 500 suppliers of its own who are waiting to see what kind of labor agreement Delphi negotiates with the United Auto Workers. Once a leaner Delphi emerges from bankruptcy, its suppliers could face added pressure to lower their own costs through wage cuts or increased use of overseas labor.

"There's a great deal of concern among auto suppliers about whether they can remain profitable or survive with union contracts," said Jim Gillette, a supplier analyst with CSM Worldwide. "If Delphi's willing to force renegotiation through a bankruptcy filing, I suspect other suppliers would do the same."

Union members also are watching closely. Tonyia Young, a UAW member from Anderson, Ind., has worked for auto supplier Guide Corp. since 2002 and worries that Guide will match changes in Delphi's contracts because Delphi has a plant nearby. Guide, like Delphi, already has a two-tier wage agreement that allows it to pay newer hires like Young around $15, $8 less than its older hires.

In a letter sent to UAW members last week, local union leaders in Indiana said Delphi wants to cut hourly wages from $27 to $10-$12, slash vacation time and make workers contribute more for their own health care. The letter warned that cuts under a bankruptcy judge could be even worse.

Young said concessions at supplier plants are part of a growing pattern that UAW members need to confront during Delphi's restructuring.

"I think Delphi workers probably have no choice but to strike," she said. "The corporation has filed bankruptcy and they've kind of drawn the line in the sand about what they're willing to do. It seems to me that any negotiation between our leadership and Delphi will not be very productive."

James McTevia, a restructuring expert who is representing Delphi suppliers in the bankruptcy proceedings, said Delphi could set a new model for the entire industry by scaling back its hourly work force and its U.S. manufacturing capacity and giving lower wages and benefits to the workers that remain.

Such a change is sorely needed, McTevia said. Autos and auto parts will always be made in the United States for U.S. customers, he said, but the country needs less capacity than it currently has, and companies need to increase their presence in emerging markets such as Asia.

"North America, Michigan and Detroit are no longer going to be the auto capitals of the world. The auto capital of the world is going global," McTevia said.

Despite Delphi's troubles, Gillette said there's still a future for auto suppliers in the U.S. market. Japanese, German and Korean automakers are moving parts operations here so they can supply their U.S. plants, he said, and while they may not be unionized they often match union wages.

Suppliers who produce parts that require a high level of skill and training, such as precision pieces for fuel injectors, also face less competitive pressure from overseas, he said.

"We do have a competitive advantage in very complex, precision components for the automobile," he said.


------


Dee-Ann Durbin can be reached at ddurbin@ap.org.


------


On the Net:

Delphi Corp., http://www.delphi.com

United Auto Workers, http://www.uaw.org

http://www.freep.com/news/statewire/sw122425_20051009.htm
 

Brown Pride

Star
Registered
Greed said:
thankfully all we have to do is wait until bush get out of office then corporations will be honest again like they were before him.

thanks for that ray of hope thoughtone.


Check this out mi hermano,the Republicans are out to wipe out the middle class,they are talking about paying workers $10 and houe,while the manegment gets million doloe bonus got staying with them.That's a fucking slap in the working mans face.If the get a way with this,then this whole country is doomed as far as the working man that is,only rich and poor is what the Rephuckkklicans want.
 

thoughtone

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Greed said:
thankfully all we have to do is wait until bush get out of office then corporations will be honest again like they were before him.

thanks for that ray of hope thoughtone.

...or at least until the corporate loving republican congress and senate are returned to the people.

Like one of the biggest Bush contributors, Enron!
 

thoughtone

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Oct 27, 6:09 PM EDT

GM Stock Falls After SEC Subpoenas Data

By DAVID N. GOODMAN
Associated Press Writer

DETROIT (AP) -- General Motors Corp. shares fell almost 7 percent late Thursday, the day after the company said it received a Securities and Exchange Commission subpoena for documents about its dealings with parts maker Delphi Corp. and other matters.

GM, the world's largest automaker, announced the SEC actions in a public filing Wednesday.

GM shares fell $1.98, or 6.8 percent, to close at $27.19 Thursday on the New York Stock Exchange. The stock has traded between $24.67 and $40.82 over the past year.

In its filing, GM said it was cooperating with the SEC "in connection with investigations reported by the media concerning pension and other post-employment benefits ... and certain transactions between General Motors and Delphi."

GM said in the filing that it would have no further comment.

DaimlerChrysler AG revealed in an SEC filing this week that the SEC has subpoenaed information about the way the company calculates pension benefits for North American employees.

DaimlerChrysler said the request was connected to an investigation of accounting issues at GM that began in October 2004, and that Ford Motor Co. also has been subpoenaed.

GM said the SEC subpoenas covered "various matters involving GM that it has under investigation (including) GM's recovery of recall costs from suppliers and supplier price reductions or credits." The SEC is probing "any obligation GM may have to fund pension and (post-employment benefit) costs in connection with Delphi's proceedings under Chapter 11" bankruptcy protection, GM said.

Troy-based Delphi, the largest U.S. auto supplier and a former GM subsidiary, filed for bankruptcy protection Oct. 8.

GM said it also has received SEC and federal grand jury subpoenas involving its General Motors Acceptance Corp. financing arm as part of "industry wide investigations into practices in the insurance industry relating to loss mitigation insurance."

GM said it was cooperating with all of the investigations.

---

On the Net:

General Motors Corp.: http://www.gm.com

Delphi Corp.: http://www.delphi.com

U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission: http://www.sec.gov


Humm, the plot thickens!
 
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