Cali is sunk until they allow sales of Weed
I'd move there just to get a med card.
Cali is sunk until they allow sales of Weed
I'd move there just to get a med card.
I agree with some of what you are saying. But no one is saying that GM could not have filed Chapter 11. But without D.I.P. financing, how do you propose they would have been able to operate during this period? If and when a company can no longer show itself to be able to operate as a going concern, the creditors and the bankruptcy judge usually move the filing to Chapter 7 status.
Are you suggesting that there were D.I.P. financing sources, other than the government? Can you name them? I can tell you that no one that I know in the automotive or banking universe knew anything about these D.I.P. sources... because they didn't exist.
It wouldn't matter how many concessions the various stakeholders would have been willing to agree to if there were no funds to operate the company. And the only reason GM exited bankruptcy in such a short period of time is because the government ram rodded the process through (right or wrong). Normally this process would have taken many months, or even years. And the operational funds during this period would have come from where???
Did this government action set a bad precedent? Not for me to say. Possibly it did. But I'm a realist, not an economic philosopher.
What do you mean, "what demand?" It's a major mistake to believe that North American auto demand dropped to zero units , even at its worst. Demand dropped by nearly 50%, and financing what demand there was made the situation very unpleasant for all involved. ). But there was most certainly some level of demand.
I have no idea what you mean by "overbuild capacity". Do you mean the overbuilding of production facilities ..
And as much as many claim to be all for free markets and (quasi) laissez faire capitalism, the truth of the matter is, Americans would not patiently wait around for the free market to heal itself, once unemployment hit the (as measured) 11-12% mark (actually more like 18-20% using previous methods).
It depends on which period GM decided to file.
If GM had pursued D.I.P. funding (or the Chrysler merger) earlier it could have been able to obtain the needed funding, thus putting GM on the tough road to recovery much sooner.
GM, however, was having none of it (bankruptcy filing) well into 2009.
GM has been failing for years (hemorrhaging since 2005) and was slow to react. While Toyota, Ford, Honda, and others were focusing on hybrid technology and fuel efficient vehicles, GM was pumping out Escalades, Hummers, Tahoes and other cars and trucks with poor fuel efficiency. The company was relying on trucks for more than 60 percent of its U.S. volume.
http://s.wsj.net/public/resources/images/MK_AU664B_GMLOSS02272009001847.gif
According to GM's financial consultant, Evercore, GM "began working in June of 2008 on capital-raising options and prepared to make a public announcement of its liquidity preservation plan in conjunction with its 2Q2008 earnings release in July." In July, GM "began discussions with several potential underwriters" to obtain secured debt financing.
They were being lined up, but the window was closing quickly at that point.
By late 2008, GM was unable to obtain funding not just because of the financial crisis but because of GM.
By then, the Government was tossing around the idea of D.I.P. funding as part of a managed restructuring, as mentioned previously, GM was having none of it (bankruptcy filing) well into 2009.
A realist should be able to appreciate and understand that if GM is backed by the national treasury, Ford and other competitors face an uneven playing field with real consequences.
Of course. (and overbuilding production facilities focused on the wrong product lines)
Again. I am happy to see that at first you say you have "no idea" but then immediately come up with it.
The original point was that there have not been only two choices: Government bailout or catastrophe. That is misleading.
Highest unemployment rate is 26 years:thumbsup:
^^Lagging (no, not tights). And yet - notwithstanding - IMF are saying Recession (nearly) over. :wtf: are they on???
When GDP shows positive growth, by the classic definition, we're no longer in recession at that point. But unemployment could continue to go up for months after that.
Dont you think someone should create an indicator of our economy that gives the average person a little more attention.
I think that GDP going into positive was accepted as an end to a recession because that meant that goods and services started selling again and even though unemployment would lag, eventually those companies providing the goods and services will need to start hiring again to keep providing those services...what goods and services do we really still provide that will be the foundation of the hiring spree we need.