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fine della telenovela Chrysler

Direttamente da Google Finance / New York Times:

Fiat Completes Acquisition of Chrysler Assets

With the touch of pen to paper and a simple wire transfer, Chrysler completed its deal with Fiat on Wednesday morning, largely ending its quick trip through bankruptcy.

The last obstacle to an exit ? a temporary stay imposed by the Supreme Court ? was lifted late Tuesday, after the nine justices declined to hear a challenge of the deal by three Indiana state funds and several consumer groups.

The wire transfer, from the federal government, gives Chrysler $6.6 billion in exit financing.

A two-page order from the Supreme Court made it clear that it was not ruling on the merits of the Indiana funds? case. But the justices wrote that the funds, which represent teachers and police officers, ?have not carried the burden? of proving that the Supreme Court needed to intervene.

After more than a month of sometimes dramatic court hearings, Chrysler sold the bulk of its assets to Fiat in almost anticlimactic fashion: in the offices of the Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft, the law firm that is advising the Treasury Department?s auto task force. The sale was completed at about 9 a.m.

The speed with which Chrysler?s restructuring plan swept through the court system was an important victory for the Obama administration, which is seeking to remake the American auto industry after years of declining sales. When Chrysler filed for bankruptcy on April 30, President Obama promised its restructuring would be ?efficient? and ?controlled.? Company and government officials repeatedly exhorted the courts to approve the restructuring swiftly, citing the $100 million a day that Chrysler was consuming as it idled its plants and paid other overhead costs.

Chrysler was openly acknowledged as a test case for General Motors, a far larger and more complex company only in the early stages of its bankruptcy case.

As envisioned by Chrysler, Fiat and the government, Wednesday?s sale will create a new carmaker freed from old Chrysler?s crushing labor costs and debt levels. It will have gained in Fiat, which will run the company, a partner skilled in making and selling small, fuel-efficient cars around the world.

Under the plan, the carmaker would emerge from bankruptcy with a union retiree trust owning 55 percent, Fiat owning a 20 percent share that could eventually grow to 35 percent, and the United States and Canadian governments holding minority stakes.

But the hardest part for Chrysler begins now. Stung by the recession, Americans have shown relatively little appetite for buying new cars.

Chrysler has been hit hardest among the three Detroit companies by the slump which began last year and which has resulted in the worst sales in more than a quarter century.

Through May, Chrysler sales were down 46.3 percent, and it held just 10 percent of the car and truck market, down from nearly 15 percent a few years ago. It ranks only fifth in the American market, behind G.M., Toyota, Ford and Honda.

Chrysler employees, who were once considered among the industry?s most energetic and innovative, now face the prospect of adjusting to their third set of owners in less than two years. In recent weeks, teams from Fiat have been going over the company?s operations in Auburn Hills, Mich., much as teams from Cerberus Capital Management did in 2007, when the investment group bought the company from DaimlerChrysler.

Likewise, employees can expect new management at Chrysler, much as Cerberus brought in Robert L. Nardelli, the former Home Depot chief executive, and James Press from Toyota?s American operations. Sergio Marchionne, the chief executive of Fiat, has said he would run Chrysler, but he, too, is likely to bring in some managers.

The impact on Chrysler?s lineup will take longer to be felt. Chrysler, more than any other American player, depends heavily on Jeeps, minivans and pickups as the bulk of its lineup, even after gas prices rose above $4 last year. Small Fiats are expected to be sold at Chrysler dealers, such as the Fiat 500, the latest version of the perennial Italian favorite. But it could take months or years to adapt them to emissions and safety requirements in the United States.

For the moment, Chrysler dealers will have to rely on many of the same vehicles sold by Chrysler before it entered bankruptcy. And there will be far fewer of those dealers: hundreds closed Tuesday night, and their cars and trucks will be redistributed among remaining showrooms.

Accordo chiuso, Chrysler è in mano nostra... :D
 
CasperGhost ha scritto:
Direttamente da Google Finance / New York Times:

Fiat Completes Acquisition of Chrysler Assets

With the touch of pen to paper and a simple wire transfer, Chrysler completed its deal with Fiat on Wednesday morning, largely ending its quick trip through bankruptcy.

The last obstacle to an exit ? a temporary stay imposed by the Supreme Court ? was lifted late Tuesday, after the nine justices declined to hear a challenge of the deal by three Indiana state funds and several consumer groups.

The wire transfer, from the federal government, gives Chrysler $6.6 billion in exit financing.

A two-page order from the Supreme Court made it clear that it was not ruling on the merits of the Indiana funds? case. But the justices wrote that the funds, which represent teachers and police officers, ?have not carried the burden? of proving that the Supreme Court needed to intervene.

After more than a month of sometimes dramatic court hearings, Chrysler sold the bulk of its assets to Fiat in almost anticlimactic fashion: in the offices of the Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft, the law firm that is advising the Treasury Department?s auto task force. The sale was completed at about 9 a.m.

The speed with which Chrysler?s restructuring plan swept through the court system was an important victory for the Obama administration, which is seeking to remake the American auto industry after years of declining sales. When Chrysler filed for bankruptcy on April 30, President Obama promised its restructuring would be ?efficient? and ?controlled.? Company and government officials repeatedly exhorted the courts to approve the restructuring swiftly, citing the $100 million a day that Chrysler was consuming as it idled its plants and paid other overhead costs.

Chrysler was openly acknowledged as a test case for General Motors, a far larger and more complex company only in the early stages of its bankruptcy case.

As envisioned by Chrysler, Fiat and the government, Wednesday?s sale will create a new carmaker freed from old Chrysler?s crushing labor costs and debt levels. It will have gained in Fiat, which will run the company, a partner skilled in making and selling small, fuel-efficient cars around the world.

Under the plan, the carmaker would emerge from bankruptcy with a union retiree trust owning 55 percent, Fiat owning a 20 percent share that could eventually grow to 35 percent, and the United States and Canadian governments holding minority stakes.

But the hardest part for Chrysler begins now. Stung by the recession, Americans have shown relatively little appetite for buying new cars.

Chrysler has been hit hardest among the three Detroit companies by the slump which began last year and which has resulted in the worst sales in more than a quarter century.

Through May, Chrysler sales were down 46.3 percent, and it held just 10 percent of the car and truck market, down from nearly 15 percent a few years ago. It ranks only fifth in the American market, behind G.M., Toyota, Ford and Honda.

Chrysler employees, who were once considered among the industry?s most energetic and innovative, now face the prospect of adjusting to their third set of owners in less than two years. In recent weeks, teams from Fiat have been going over the company?s operations in Auburn Hills, Mich., much as teams from Cerberus Capital Management did in 2007, when the investment group bought the company from DaimlerChrysler.

Likewise, employees can expect new management at Chrysler, much as Cerberus brought in Robert L. Nardelli, the former Home Depot chief executive, and James Press from Toyota?s American operations. Sergio Marchionne, the chief executive of Fiat, has said he would run Chrysler, but he, too, is likely to bring in some managers.

The impact on Chrysler?s lineup will take longer to be felt. Chrysler, more than any other American player, depends heavily on Jeeps, minivans and pickups as the bulk of its lineup, even after gas prices rose above $4 last year. Small Fiats are expected to be sold at Chrysler dealers, such as the Fiat 500, the latest version of the perennial Italian favorite. But it could take months or years to adapt them to emissions and safety requirements in the United States.

For the moment, Chrysler dealers will have to rely on many of the same vehicles sold by Chrysler before it entered bankruptcy. And there will be far fewer of those dealers: hundreds closed Tuesday night, and their cars and trucks will be redistributed among remaining showrooms.

Accordo chiuso, Chrysler è in mano nostra... :D

Signore e Signori allacciate le cinture....
Il viaggio sta per cominciare :!: :!: ;)
 
sitorno ha scritto:
testerr ha scritto:
E così alla fine è arrivato anche il sì della Corte Suprema e la Fiat-Chrysler può partire. Al di là dell'espressione un po' arcigna e micragnosa, il magistrato Ruth Joan Bader Ginsburg nella serata di ieri ha emesso un verdetto favorevole ai "conquistatori" italiani, respingendo il ricorso presentato dai fondi pensione dell'Indiana che contestavano la decisione di vendere la Chrysler alla Fiat emersa dall'esame del tribunale fallimentare e confermata anche dalla Corte d'Appello di New York.

:lol: :lol:

....tutto il mondo è paese.....anche lì la giustizia può essere addomesticata....
alla faccia dei telefilm americani sulla giustizia vera e pura....
appunto, tutto il mondo è paese quindi molti stranieri non si permettano di giudicare. Quanto alla giustizia, basta vedere i telefilm americani per rendersi conto che è tutto un "do ut des".
 
sitorno ha scritto:
tvrgb ha scritto:
sitorno ha scritto:
testerr ha scritto:
E così alla fine è arrivato anche il sì della Corte Suprema e la Fiat-Chrysler può partire. Al di là dell'espressione un po' arcigna e micragnosa, il magistrato Ruth Joan Bader Ginsburg nella serata di ieri ha emesso un verdetto favorevole ai "conquistatori" italiani, respingendo il ricorso presentato dai fondi pensione dell'Indiana che contestavano la decisione di vendere la Chrysler alla Fiat emersa dall'esame del tribunale fallimentare e confermata anche dalla Corte d'Appello di New York.

:lol: :lol:

....tutto il mondo è paese.....anche lì la giustizia può essere addomesticata....
alla faccia dei telefilm americani sulla giustizia vera e pura....
-
ripeteresti il tutto argomentando come si deve e firmando col tuo nome e cognome, o sei un eroe mascherato?

....perchè, secondo te, il verdetto non è politico per le pressioni sul giudice da parte del governo ?
....ve lo immaginate cosa sarebbe successo in italia se il governo avesse fatto pressioni sulla Cassazione per ottenere un verdetto a lui favorevole ?....
...sitorno....
perchè non parli della Opel/Magna? perchè non parli della telenovela VW-Porsche dove quest'ultima sta aspettando capitali arabi (visto che è sotto di 9 mld di euro) per fare acquisti? ma temo che tu abbia il paraocchi e le discussioni con te siano inutili.
 
Ora il sesto produttore al mondo di automobili ha un'ascendente italiano...
Da Bloomberg:

June 10 (Bloomberg) -- Fiat SpA and partners bought most of Chrysler LLC?s assets, creating the world?s sixth-largest carmaker in Chief Executive Officer Sergio Marchionne?s plan to survive the recession by establishing a global presence.

Fiat, Italy?s biggest manufacturer, will own 20 percent of the newly formed Chrysler Group LLC, the companies said today in a statement.

The combined company would have sales of 4.5 million vehicles globally, ranking just behind Ford Motor Co. based on 2008 results. Marchionne is pushing for consolidation in the auto industry because he expects only six global producers to survive the first global recession since World War II.

?Now management and investors can worry about delivering Fiat technology platforms and returning Chrysler to profitability,? John Buckland, an automotive analyst with MF Global Securities in London, said before the announcement. ?Can Marchionne succeed where others have failed? It will be some years before any meaningful cash flow accrues to Fiat shareholders,? said Buckland, who has a ?sell? recommendation on the company?s stock.

The purchase of Auburn Hills, Michigan-based Chrysler?s assets is the first transaction toward Marchionne?s goal of selling 6 million cars a year, the minimum he says is required to be profitable through the economic contraction. Chrysler, which shut its 22 U.S. factories on May 1, didn?t receive any other bids for its assets.

The acquisition transfers most of Chrysler?s operations, excluding eight manufacturing sites, dozens of pieces of real estate, equipment leases and contracts with 789 U.S. auto dealerships.

Non-Cash Offer

Fiat also made a non-cash offer in May for General Motors Corp.?s Opel and Vauxhall brands in Europe. Magna International Inc., Canada?s biggest car-parts maker, was chosen at the end of last month as preferred bidder for the GM Europe division and is in talks on completing the takeover.

Chrysler filed for bankruptcy protection on April 30, using the reorganization to retain its strongest assets and form an alliance with Fiat. The U.S. and Canadian governments are financing the Chrysler sale with $2 billion.

Fiat has the option of raising its stake to 35 percent once sales and earnings targets are met. The sale will allow the U.S. carmaker to revive its Chrysler, Jeep and Dodge brands with less debt and lower wage costs.

The U.S. Supreme Court overturned objections to the transaction by Indiana state pension funds and U.S. consumer advocates, ruling yesterday that the Chrysler creditors? challenges didn?t meet the legal standard for an emergency stay of the deal.

New CEO

Marchionne will become the CEO of the new company and Turin-based Fiat will provide technology, platforms and know-how to help Chrysler revive its operations. Fiat produced just over 2 million cars last year.

The pairing of Chrysler and Fiat brings together companies with largely different products and markets. Chrysler gets more than 90 percent of its sales from North America through its three brands. Fiat has almost no presence on the continent.

The Italian automaker has the most fuel-efficient lineup of vehicles in Europe while Chrysler is known for V8-powered large sedans, sport-utility vehicles and pickups.

Chrysler may begin selling the first Fiat vehicles in as little as 18 months, executives at both companies have said. The combined company will build a new car in the U.S. based on the mechanical underpinnings of Fiat?s Alfa Romeo 149 that hasn?t gone on sale yet. Chrysler also is planning to sell the Fiat 500, a subcompact similar in size to Daimler AG?s Smart minicar.

The U.S. company may build Fiat engines in an unused section of its Dundee, Michigan, factory, Scott Garberding, Chrysler?s purchasing chief, said in court testimony.
 
harada31 ha scritto:
Ragazzi non infierite su Sitorno..adesso ha un problema ancora più grosso..il cappello di ieri con cui Fiat sarebbe dovuta presentarsi da PSA o BMW gli è rimasto in mano e non sa dove infilarselo.

:D :lol: :twisted: :twisted:
 
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