Jill Schlesinger

The Financial Decoder

Steeped in GM: My Fascination with a Fallen Icon

By Jill Schlesinger | May 29, 2009 |

I just got bumped from my 7:06 am appearance on the Early Show about GM. I’m so steeped in the GM bankruptcy that I didn’t even know about the breaking news story that replaced me: a Pennsylvania mother staged a fake kidnapping and went to Disney to celebrate. Or something like that.

I guess this isn’t a big story for my morning media buffet of The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Financial Times and Bloomberg. “Maybe you should expand your horizons,” noted one of the producers. I didn’t have time to explain my fascination with the auto industry. It’s not just the impending bankruptcy of GM. There’s something so compelling about the fall of a 100-year old brand that helped define this country.

In must be in my blood. My father told me “Your great-grandfather LOVED General Motors. He only bought GM cars and his largest stock position was in GM…he’d be sick about this bankruptcy.” It wasn’t just my great-grandfather–there were millions who adored their US-made cars and the companies that built them. Just listen to the great Dinah Shore croon about Chevrolet’s–it’s practically like the national anthem!

But the auto industry no longer defines American capitalism. In the early sixties, GM accounted for over half of all car sales in this country. Today, its market share has dropped to under 20%. And when GM files for bankruptcy on Monday, it will be removed from the Dow Jones Industrial Average and replaced by a soon-to-named company. I’m lobbying for Google, but that’s unlikely.

As we say to goodbye to ol’ GM, it’s worth noting the winners and losers in this fiasco (this was the topic of my bumped segment).

Winners:

  • Institutional bondholders: does anyone else have a sneaking suspicion that some of the unsecured bondholders are going to make money in this transaction?
  • Foreign car makers: Toyota and Honda face an injured opponent and will gain market share.
  • Lawyers: Bankruptcy lawyers are the new black in corporate firms. They waited through a long expansion and will now be rewarded with big fees.

Losers:

  • Workers/Suppliers who will be downsized: GM plans to cut over 20,000 jobs in an effort to reduce its workforce from 60,000 to 38,000 by 2010.  Suppliers from Alaska to Florida could be impacted, as seen with the Visteon bankruptcy filing.
  • Unions: The UAW concessions mean that workers will give up some benefits. The decision was obvious: better to have a job with limited benefits than no job at all. More significantly, unions have suffered a permanent loss of power.
  • US taxpayers: Fellow shareholders, we now own over 70% of beleaguered company that faces immense competition in a shrinking market.  If the “new GM” can’t survive, we can kiss our billions goodbye.
 
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    jimmel

    05/29/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Steeped in GM: My Fascination with a Fallen Icon

    You forgot to add dealers to your list of losers. These bankruptcies are a license to steal..If you are on the list of dealers being cut. We lose all our investment in tools, training, parts, etc., not to mention the units we have to sell but can't offer warrrenty work on. Also our investments in property, buildings, etc. We may lose everything we have worked for all our lives, but no one is offering us any "bailout" help.
    The unions may lose many things, but they are not the losers we dealers are. I'm so tired of hearing that car companies built "vehicles that no one wanted". We sold 5 -6 pickups and SUVs for every car we sold. Our customers needed these vehicles for their jobs etc. Now they will have to go 60 - 70 miles to San Antonio or Austin for service.
    Our slogan was "Home of the big 3: Dodge, Ford and GMC".

    I'm afraid Ford will see how Crysler and GM have made out and will follow them to bankruptcy...

  •  
    2

    Jill Schlesinger

    05/29/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Steeped in GM: My Fascination with a Fallen Icon

    You are absolutely correct--I should have listed dealers. What are you plans going forward? Are you making a change in your business? Thanks again for pointing out my omission...Jill

  •  
    3

    jimmel

    06/01/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Steeped in GM: My Fascination with a Fallen Icon

    Don't know what plans are for the future...My husband and son are so upset they don't talk about it much. We still will have Ford, unless something comes up there. We have (had!) 2 dealers in our county of about 12,000 population. The Chevrolet/Pontiac dealer is being cut also. He invested heavily in a large facility several years ago. Our loyal customers are losers here too. They depended on fast service work for the vehicles that they use in their businesses..thanks for your response...jimmel

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Jill Schlesinger

Jill Schlesinger is the Editor-at-Large for CBS MoneyWatch.com. Prior to the launch of MoneyWatch, she was the Chief Investment Officer for an independent investment advisory firm. In her infancy, she was an options trader on the Commodities Exchange of New York.

Jill Schlesinger

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