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ScionDriver
04-05-2007, 12:41 PM
I guess if MB really is going to sell off Chrysler, Kerkorian wants to be in line for it.


Kerkorian offers $4.5B for Chrysler
Maverick financier proposes to take troubled automaker private, offers stake for UAW; Daimler stock rallies.
By Chris Isidore, CNNMoney.com senior writer
April 5 2007: 3:32 PM EDT
NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Kirk Kerkorian, once the biggest shareholder of Chrysler Corp., has sent a letter to DaimlerChrysler offering to buy the struggling automaker back for $4.5 billion.

Kerkorian is proposing to take the struggling automaker private, and his bid is contingent upon reaching a deal on a new labor agreement with the United Auto Workers union.

His letter, released to the public, says he would offer ownership stakes to the union and its membership as well as Chrysler management were he to buy it.

He also said the offer is contingent on reaching what he called an "equitable arrangement" with DaimlerChrysler for it to assume some of the unfunded pension liabilities and health care costs of Chrysler retirees. But he said the cash offer is not contingent upon arranging financing.

DaimlerChrysler (up $3.06 to $84.13, Charts) shares jumped nearly 3 percent in Thursday afternoon trading, and shares of General Motors rallied as well.

Kerkorian's letter offers to give DaimlerChrysler a $100 million escrow fee, a quarter of which he said he would forfeit if he were to walk away from the deal after conducting due diligence.

Han Tjan, a spokesman for DaimlerChrysler's New York office, had only limited comment, saying, "We do confirm that we are potential interested partners. All options are open. We do not have any further comments."

A UAW spokesman was not immediately available for comment, nor was any spokesman for Kerkorian. In addition to releasing Kerkorian's letter, the financier's investment firm also released a letter to DaimlerChrysler from Jerry York, his adviser and a former Chrysler executive who helped to lead a previous turnaround at the company. In the letter he argues that fixing the problems at Chrysler would be easier for an independent but privately held company.

York's letter said Kerkorian would "offer a substantial portion of equity in the company to the UAW as part of finding a solution to ever-rising healthcare costs, which not only are unaffordable by corporations, but over time will likely prove to be unaffordable by governmental entities as well."

DaimlerChrysler Chairman and CEO Dieter Zetsche confirmed at the company's annual meeting Wednesday that it has been in discussions with buyers who had shown "clear interest" in the company's North American unit, which lost $1.5 billion last year and is not projected by the company to return to profitability until 2008.

The unit was essentially put up for sale on Feb. 14, when Zetsche said Daimler would look at all options for the company, the same day he and Chrysler executives unveiled a turnaround plan that called for the automaker to close plants and cut 13,000 jobs, about 16 percent of its North American staff.

The company's labor agreement with the UAW runs through September, as do similar agreements between the union and General Motors (Charts) and Ford (Charts). All three U.S.-based automakers have been losing share to Asian automakers such as Toyota Motor (Charts), which operate nonunion plants. Toyota passed DaimlerChrysler in U.S. sales for the first time in 2006 to take its traditional No. 3 ranking.

While Chrysler has been losing money, it does have some attractive assets, notably Jeep, and is reported to have attracted bids from some of the nation's largest private equity firms, including the Blackstone Group and Cerberus Capital Management, as well as from a Canadian parts supplier, Magna International (Charts).

Kerkorian's most recent investment in the auto industry did not go well. He started buying shares of GM in 2005, and boosted his stake to 9.9 percent. His associate, York, was put on GM's board.

Kerkorian and York pushed GM to cut pay for top executives and directors and slash its dividend in half in an effort to win support of the unions there. But he was unsuccessful in his efforts to get GM to join an alliance with Japanese automaker Nissan (Charts) and French automaker Renault, which own stakes in one another and share a CEO, Carlos Ghosn.

Kerkorian's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission show that he lost about $8.6 million buying and selling GM over a 19-month period, although dividends from the troubled automaker allowed him to walk away with more than $100 million in cash from the investment.

Kerkorian was the largest shareholder of Chrysler in 1998 when Daimler-Benz bought the company for $37 billion, and he remained an investor in the combined company right after the merger.

But he soon fell out with DaimlerChrysler leadership, accusing them of disguising an acquisition as a merger of equals between the German and American automakers that did not pay a sufficient takeover premium.

In November 2000 he sued DaimlerChrysler for $9 billion, and he subsequently sold his remaining stake in the company. His suit was dismissed in April 2005.



Link: http://money.cnn.com/2007/04/05/news/companies/kerkorian_chrysler/index.htm?postversion=2007040515

baddabang
04-05-2007, 12:45 PM
Better him then GM.

drakkie
04-05-2007, 12:49 PM
Well i don't know the reliability of the source, but a tiny article in a free newspaper (Spits) announced today that it had been made official they would sell it... :o

fisetdavid26
04-05-2007, 12:50 PM
Better him then GM.
Yeah, a rather struggling company buying another struggling company is quite a risky move.

Kitdy
04-05-2007, 01:08 PM
At least it will be owned by itself again. I think that will be great for Chrysler, and I think that Chrysler will eventually come back and be profitable - maybe better than Ford or GM.

Coventrysucks
04-05-2007, 02:45 PM
I think that will be great for Chrysler

Yes, access to old Daimler technology (300 = old E-Class, Crossfire = old SLK, diesel engines in European models) was really preventing Chrysler from making high-quality, highly desirable cars.

Now, without access to that technology and no access to Daimler's billions, they are really set to come good.

ScionDriver
04-05-2007, 04:19 PM
What is the deal with Chrysler's relability, I dont think I ever read anything about it being as bad as some of you guys are making it out to be, anyone have any links or anything that I can see some reports on the bad reliability.

Kitdy
04-05-2007, 07:05 PM
Yes, access to old Daimler technology (300 = old E-Class, Crossfire = old SLK, diesel engines in European models) was really preventing Chrysler from making high-quality, highly desirable cars.

Now, without access to that technology and no access to Daimler's billions, they are really set to come good.

Crossfire = crap, in case you didn't notice and Chrysler hasn't realy flourished under Dailmer-Chrysler anyways. Maybe the tutorship of Mercedes brought Chrysler too high up market or something, but I think that a new leader will help Chryler get into the black. I don't know the busisness of it well enough but I have a feeling that things will get better out of D-C.

IBrake4Rainbows
04-06-2007, 03:56 AM
Without this merger Chrysler would have been dead 8 years ago. it's pretty simple.

However the time has come to sell - Kerkorian might just be the cash the company needs to splutter through another decade making pitiful attempts at automobiles.

adrenaline
04-06-2007, 05:04 AM
I personally hope that Chrysler is atleast partially purchased by GM. They need something to fall back on in case they go bust.

And I'm dismissing Kerkorian's bid - it's too low.

I would imagine Daimler-Benz feels hopeless when they are being offered $4.58 billion for a company which they paid $37 billion for!

Ferrer
04-06-2007, 10:59 AM
I personally hope that Chrysler is atleast partially purchased by GM. They need something to fall back on in case they go bust.

And I'm dismissing Kerkorian's bid - it's too low.

I would imagine Daimler-Benz feels hopeless when they are being offered $4.58 billion for a company which they paid $37 billion for!
They are thinking of the potential loses... :o

A bit unrelated, but sometimes I wonder, is it that difficult to make good cars?

Kitdy
04-06-2007, 11:01 AM
They are thinking of the potential loses... :o

A bit unrelated, but sometimes I wonder, is it that difficult to make good cars?

In comparisson to the excellent Japanese competition, yes. :D

Coventrysucks
04-07-2007, 04:01 PM
DAIMLERCHRYSLER DESPARATELY DITCHES DIRE DIVISION (http://www.sniffpetrol.com/)

adrenaline
04-07-2007, 07:41 PM
^ That is brilliant!

john14
04-09-2007, 08:32 AM
Originally Posted by Coventrysucks
DAIMLERCHRYSLER DESPARATELY DITCHES DIRE DIVISION


Cov, thank you for posting that link. It is hilarious. :D

ANDREW G
04-20-2007, 05:08 PM
As per today workers are trying to make amove to block buy out:confused: Up hill battle!

454MAG
05-14-2007, 12:38 PM
SOLD 7.4 BILLION?? John Snow the former U.S. Treasury Secretary says they will recover we all know whos gonna foot that bill:rolleyes:

Falcon500
05-20-2007, 02:23 AM
Who would of thought the prospective thread for a possible chrysler sale would of been so funny this forums tops :D