GM shares up, GMAC may be eyeing $6 b
Shares of General Motors Corp jumped on Friday after its auto finance
affiliate GMAC won access to government lending programs, while analysts
estimated GMAC might be seeking loans of more than $6 billion.
The Federal Reserve approved GMAC's status as a bank on Wednesday,
giving the troubled finance company access to the Treasury-run financial
bailout package, which may help GMAC avoid bankruptcy and continue
financing of dealer and consumer loans for GM vehicles.
The news came less than a week after the U.S. government agreed to
bail out GM and Chrysler LLC with $17.4 billion of emergency loans to
provide liquidity and stave off collapse and massive job losses.
Analysts said the approval of GMAC as a bank further reduced the risk
of bankruptcy for the No.1 U.S. automaker.
Underscoring the financial strains facing the U.S. auto industry, GM
filed a lawsuit on Wednesday against a bankrupt auto-parts supplier,
saying it is holding necessary equipment "hostage" and that could
potentially interrupt the launch of its new Chevrolet Camaro car.
"It's significant in terms of GM's ability to move cars," said Erich
Merkle, an analyst at Crowe Horwath.
"Things are still pretty ugly out there (in terms of sales) but in
terms of GM possibly filing for bankruptcy, in my mind that's not going
to happen. The reason I'm saying this is what they (the government) are
doing with GMAC right now."
Shares of GM were up 13.54 percent, or 44 cents, at $3.69 on the New
York Stock Exchange.
Bonds of GMAC LLC also rose, while the cost to insure GMAC's debt
with credit default swaps plunged.
CreditSights said GMAC may have applied for up to $6 billion in funds
from the government's $700 billion financial bailout program, and could
potentially sell $17.5 billion in government-backed debt to shore up its
capital position.
"While GMAC has not quantified its capital injection request from
Troubled Assets Relief Program (TARP), we estimate the company could
have applied for up to about $6.3 billion," CreditSights analysts
Richard Hofmann and Adam Steer said in a report late on Thursday.
The analysts based their projections based on capital injections
being limited to 3 percent of risk-weighed assets.
- Reuters
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