The GM "Total Confidence Plan" isn't persuading secured debtholders.

The GM "Total Confidence Plan" isn't persuading secured debtholders who'd rather cash out.

General Motors has just confirmed that it will draw an additional $2 billion in U.S. Treasury loans to maintain adequate liquidity, as the company continues tense negotiations with bondholders and unions about the concessions needed to revise its business plan.

President Obama’s Auto Task Force rejected GM’s February submission last month as “not viable” because it didn’t clean up its balance sheet enough and gave GM until June 1 to come up with a better plan, less encumbered with fixed costs and debt.

The latest bridge loan means taxpayers have now lent GM $15.4 billion, a relatively small – some say paltry — sum compared to the hundreds upon hundreds of billions given to the financial institutions that are the root cause of the current global Great Recession.

While the need for the additional funding of $2.6 billion was contained in GM’s February “viability report” to the U.S. Treasury, Fritz Henderson, GM’s CEO, in his last press conference a week ago, was non-committal about GM’s need for more cash. In March, the company surprised everyone by not taking a projected $2.3 billion loan, saying that its cost cutting and cash flow were better than expected. Considering the timetable facing Chrysler whose deadline is next week, Henderson said, “I would expect (GM) could pick up the pace in the next couple weeks.”

Perhaps the timing is coincidental, but just yesterday GM announced drastic production cutbacks and layoffs, ranging from one to nine weeks, for virtually all of its North American manufacturing  plants. Since auto companies book the revenue on vehicles when they leave the plant gate on their way to dealers, production cuts automatically equate to lost revenue.

The announcements yesterday were a bitter foretaste of what a GM bankruptcy will look like. So the closings no doubt garnered the attention of state and national politicians, as media reports and TV coverage described or showed the dire consequences of shutting down so many plants. Thousand of suppliers will also be negatively affected.

In a statement GM said: “We appreciate President Obama’s and his Administration’s ongoing support of GM and the domestic U.S. auto industry as we undertake the difficult but necessary actions to reinvent our company. We will continue to work closely with members of the President’s Auto Task Force throughout our reinvention and together we will continue to monitor our liquidity needs during this period.”

There are two key issues that appear to be inhibiting GM’s effort to provide the Auto Task Force with a viable plan for recovery.  The United Autoworkers Union is being asked to reduce the $20 billion in cash previously promised by GM for its Voluntary Employee Benefits Association health care fund in return for what is currently almost worthless GM stock. A more acute problem appears to corporate bondholders or secured debt holders who are being asked to trade virtually all of their $27 billion in debt for equity in a new GM. An unkown number of these bondholders are speculators who bought the debt at deeply discounted prices. In addition, banks and hedge funds that have already received billions of dollars in taxpayer loans hold the secured debt.

One thing is certain, ongoing mass media speculation about GM’s future and what brands might or might not survive is hurting sales. In the latest media-fueled frenzy about its future, GM has just issued a statement about speculation that Pontiac will be eliminated.

“Contrary to media speculation, General Motors has not announced any changes to its long-term viability plan or to the future status of any of its brands. GM is continuing to review its restructuring plan to go further and faster and best ensure its future success. Additional information will be released as any decisions are finalized, the beleaguered company said.

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