KEITH NAUGHTON | DRIVING FORCES

Running on Empty

Can Detroit survive in this economy?

 
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Hard Times

Think the current economic crisis is bad? Before you decide, take a look at the bubbles, panics and depressions of the past.

 
 
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Detroit is running out of money and it's running out of time. Throughout this dark decade for Motown, bankruptcy talk has picked up speed. Now Detroit is gripped with a full-throttle panic: a blaring black headline in today's Detroit News that reads: "Auto Fears Grow." And for good reason. Wall Street, which has driven down GM and Ford stock to nearly nothing, now says both money-losing automakers are running out of cash and might not have enough in the till to make it to 2010, when new fuel-efficient models are supposed to save the day. In fact, Standard & Poor's says GM, America's largest automaker, might not have enough money to make it through next year. "The odds are increasingly stacked against these companies getting through 2009 unscathed," says veteran auto-analyst John Casesa.

Bankruptcy is now a clear and present danger because already ailing Detroit is caught in the backdraft of the inferno engulfing Wall Street. GM stock dropped by nearly one-third Thursday, to $4.76, its lowest price since 1950, when tailfins were new and Truman was in the White House. Ford's stock plunged 22 percent to $2.08, a low-water mark not seen since the first Reagan administration (during the double-dip recession). On Friday, Ford's stock fell below two bucks, to $1.99, down 4.3 percent, while GM rebounded slightly to $4.89, up 2.7 percent. What's more, bond sellers are valuing GM's and Ford's bonds at 25 cents to 30 cents on the dollar. "You don't see bonds trading at 30 cents on the dollar unless the market thinks you're going bankrupt," says Shelly Lombard, a senior analyst at Gimme Credit Research.

Until now, Detroit's wounds were mostly self-inflicted—they stuck to their guzzlers as gas climbed to $4 and buyers turned to Toyota. But as Wall Street melted down over the last few weeks, all automakers, even Toyota, saw shoppers stay out of their showrooms as credit dried up and confidence evaporated. Auto sales fell 23.5 percent last month and now analysts are warning of a total collapse of the global car market. Even a reprieve in gas prices, which now average $3.35 a gallon, down from $4.11 in July, goes nearly unnoticed in this calamitous car market. "If you think of all the things that could align against the domestic auto industry, I can't think of a worse scenario short of war in America," says Casesa. "But maybe that would be better because we would need tanks from Detroit."

Still, it won't be a sinking stock price and cheap bonds that push Detroit into bankruptcy. Like it would be for you or me, it will be because they simply run out of cash. GM's risk is the highest, analysts say, because it's burning through a breath-taking $1 billion a month and maybe more. Sure, it has $21 billion on hand, and just raised nearly $4 billion in September by drawing on its credit lines and swapping some debt for equity. But GM needs between $11 billion and $14 billion just to keep the lights on. So it could burn down its cash pile to less than $1 billion by the end of next year, Citigroup estimates.

Ford gave itself a bit of a cushion when it literally bet the house—putting up its factories, offices and even the Ford name as collateral—to borrow $23.4 billion in 2006. Now no one is lending to Detroit, especially after Standard & Poor's warned Thursday it might push GM's and Ford's credit ratings deeper into junk territory. (Chrysler, now privately held by Cerberus Capital Management, says it has $11.7 billion in cash, but that can't be independently verified.) "Where's the cash going to come from to support these companies?" asks long-time auto analyst Maryann Keller, who rates the prospects for a Detroit bankruptcy "very high."

The automakers, naturally, insist they're not going broke. "Bankruptcy protection is not an option GM is considering," says spokeswoman Renee Rashid-Merem. Adds Ford spokesman Mark Truby: "We were fortunate to go to the markets at the right time and secure significant liquidity before the economic downturn." Chrysler spokeswoman Shawn Morgan also contends, "Bankruptcy is not a measure we are considering." And they are all frantically cutting workers and closing factories to try to conserve cash. GM is even trying to sell its corporate headquarters to raise money. (No takers so far).

 
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  • Posted By: Nowforthetruth @ 10/12/2008 10:41:28 PM

    Comment: Bill Clinton points to liberal Congressional Democrats' protection of Fannie and Freddie from scrutiny as a primary cause of the current economic meltdown.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XsynspIqAoE

    To prove Bill Clinton's point, this is a link to a C-SPAN video clip of the Congressional hearings at roughtly the time McCains attempt at S.190. to fix fannie and freddie.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_MGT_cSi7Rs

    "Video Unearthed Democrats in their own words Covering up the Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac Scam that caused our Economic Crisis"

    The link below describes how some of those Democrats in Congress tried to use the original version of the bailout bill to divert money eventually recovered to groups like ACORN. See: Wall Street Journal

    http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122247015469280723.html?mod=googlenews_wsj

    And here is Lou Dobbs reporting on ACORN corruption and ties to Obama, including Obama Campaign paying ACORN $800,000 for voter registration activities, and Obama representing them when he was a practicing attorney.

    http://www.cnn.com/video/#/video/bestoftv/2008/10/09/ldt.tucker.acorn.under.fire.cnn

  • Posted By: Nowforthetruth @ 10/12/2008 8:06:10 PM

    Comment: This link of a CSPAN video clip may help set the context, as these hearings were at the time of McCains attempt at S.190.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_MGT_cSi7Rs

    "Video Unearthed Democrats in their own words Covering up the Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac Scam that caused our Economic Crisis"

  • Posted By: Nowforthetruth @ 10/12/2008 8:05:34 PM

    Comment: This link of a CSPAN video clip may help set the context, as these hearings were at the time of McCains attempt at S.190.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_MGT_cSi7Rs

    "Video Unearthed Democrats in their own words Covering up the Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac Scam that caused our Economic Crisis"

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