Delphi Bankruptcy

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  • Michael H.
    Expired
    • January 29, 2008
    • 7477

    #1

    Delphi Bankruptcy

    Auto Supplier Delphi Files for Bankruptcy
    By DEE-ANN DURBIN, AP Auto Writer 17 minutes ago

    DETROIT - Delphi Corp., the largest U.S. auto supplier, filed for bankruptcy Saturday, sending shock waves through the nation's auto industry, which already is weakened by high labor costs and falling market share.

    The company's bankruptcy is one of the largest in the country's history.

    Delphi filed to reorganize its U.S. operations in federal bankruptcy court in New York, where hearings are scheduled to begin next week. Delphi's non-U.S. operations were not included in the filing.

    Delphi Chairman and CEO Robert S. Miller said the company hopes to emerge from Chapter 11 in early to mid-2007.

    "We will make every effort to make this as quick as possible," Miller told The Associated Press on Saturday.

    Miller, a restructuring expert who was hired in July, had threatened to take the company into bankruptcy if he failed to reach a restructuring agreement with Delphi's former parent, General Motors Corp., and its largest union, the United Auto Workers. Miller set a deadline of Oct. 17, when U.S. bankruptcy laws are scheduled to change.

    Miller said Delphi will continue negotiating with GM and the UAW to lower its labor costs. Miller said the three parties agreed to continue their discussions after a bankruptcy filing.

    "We mutually concluded there was still too much of the complex work yet to be done," Miller said. "It was not going to be efficient to work right up to the midnight deadline to the change in the law."

    Miller said nothing will change immediately. Delphi will continue to pay its 50,000 U.S. employees and suppliers and will ship its products on schedule. Delphi has 31 plants in 13 states, including Michigan, Ohio, Alabama and California. The company has 185,000 employees worldwide.

    "We are not going to adversely affect our customers," he said. "Our people will get their pay checks and will still have their health benefits. Retirees will continue to get their checks. Any changes to that will be dealt with in an orderly way."

    Delphi will finance its operations with $4.5 billion in loans, including up to $2 billion in debtor-in-possession financing from a group of lenders led by JPMorgan Chase Bank and Citigroup Global Markets Inc.

    Delphi, based in the Detroit suburb of Troy, has struggled to make a profit since GM spun it off in 1999. It lost $4.8 billion in 2004 and nearly $750 million in the first half of this year.

    Delphi had $16.5 billion in total assets as of June 30, the most recent figure available, and has total debt of $6 billion, Standard & Poor's said Thursday. The company had $4.3 billion in unfunded pension liabilities at the end of 2004, according to a company filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

    The largest corporate bankruptcy in the U.S. was WorldCom Inc., which had $103.9 billion in pre-bankruptcy assets.

    Like Tower Automotive Inc. and other auto suppliers who have recently declared bankruptcy, Delphi has struggled with the high cost of steel and other raw materials as well as U.S. production cuts.

    But Delphi also blamed its spinoff agreement with GM for saddling it with high labor costs. Under the agreement, Delphi is required to pay GM wages of $27 an hour to most of its 24,000 UAW-represented workers. That's double the level of competing suppliers, according to Standard & Poor's Ratings Services. Delphi also had to pay full wages and benefits to 4,000 laid-off workers in jobs banks, which cost it $400 million each year.

    Delphi has a total of 30,000 U.S. hourly employees and 12,000 hourly retirees. About 6,000 hourly employees are represented by other unions, including the International Union of Electronic Workers/Communications Workers of America.

    Under a bankruptcy filing, Delphi could shift at least some of its pension liabilities to the federal government's Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp. and could get the court to order lower wages and benefits for the UAW and higher costs for its parts.

    Under the spinoff agreement, GM also is liable for some of Delphi's pension obligations if Delphi is in bankruptcy. In a note to investors, Merrill Lynch analyst John Casesa said GM could be liable for $4.4 billion to $6.7 billion worth of pension and health care benefits.

    Delphi and GM have been tightlipped about the negotiations. But a letter sent from UAW leaders to union members in Kokomo, Ind., earlier this week said Delphi asked the UAW to accept wage cuts of more than 50 percent, to $10-$12 an hour, and eliminate the jobs bank. Delphi also called for a reduction in health care benefits and vacation time.

    Delphi also has been plagued by an accounting scandal that the FBI and the SEC are now investigating. Six people have resigned because of the investigation, including Delphi's former Chief Financial Officer Alan Dawes.
  • Clem Z.
    Expired
    • January 1, 2006
    • 9427

    #2
    Re: Delphi Bankruptcy

    there goes the UAW 90% pay while on lay off,job bank,i think they call it. the unions are now seeing the hand writing on the wall at the GM auto plants because they are next unless the give consessions that GM wants

    Comment

    • Chris H.
      Very Frequent User
      • May 1, 1990
      • 805

      #3
      Re: Delphi Bankruptcy

      I think it was 95%. My brother was on it for years. Stayed and home and watched the kids.

      Comment

      • Duke W.
        Beyond Control Poster
        • January 1, 1993
        • 15229

        #4
        Re: Delphi Bankruptcy

        The business rumor mill was betting that they would file before the new bankruptcy law goes into effect, which I believe is October 17.

        Their stock was trading at less than two bucks a share this week.

        It seems that, like the airline industry, half the auto parts industry is now in bankruptcy (and the other half is "underperforming"), and Ford and GM's debt is junk rated. These two industries account for something around a quarter of the GDP.

        Something has to give - wages, benefits (health care, retirement, cushy layoff deals) - somthing!

        In in the vernacular of Chairman Greenspan - the current business models for these industries are "unsustainable".

        Duke

        Comment

        • Clem Z.
          Expired
          • January 1, 2006
          • 9427

          #5
          just like the steel mills

          everyone said they needed to modernize but that would mean they needed less workers and the unions would not have stood still for that. i have a friend that is in the steel making equiptment business and he tells me that they now turn out as many tons of steel on a shift with 70 people as they did with 700 back them

          Comment

          • Gene M.
            Extremely Frequent Poster
            • April 1, 1985
            • 4232

            #6
            Re: Delphi Bankruptcy

            Management bonus and salary in the $ millions has to stop.

            Comment

            • G B.
              Expired
              • December 1, 1974
              • 1373

              #7
              What the hell is a "job bank"?

              Is that the PC term for a "company pay for no work" welfare program? And you can be in it for YEARS? Sounds like something dreamed up in Russia or by our Federal government.

              No wonder Delphi and GM are going broke.

              Comment

              • Duke W.
                Beyond Control Poster
                • January 1, 1993
                • 15229

                #8
                Re: Delphi Bankruptcy

                American top level execs are WAAAAAAAY overpaid compared to their peers in other countries, but when you add the salary and bonus of the top dozen or so execs it doesn't amount to a drop in the total wages, salaries, bonuses, and benefits bucket for a company the size of Delphi.

                The fact remains that a lot of their parts could be made overseas at well under half the the cost of US labor, so if the unions don't give, there won't be ANY jobs in that industry.

                If the goose that lays the golden eggs all of a sudden just gives silver or copper you can take what it can give or kill the goose and end up with nothing, which if recent history is any indication, is probably what will happen.

                Duke

                Comment

                • Chris H.
                  Very Frequent User
                  • May 1, 1990
                  • 805

                  #9
                  Re: What the hell is a "job bank"?

                  Part of the negotiated settlement between GM and UAW to allow GM to close plants. If GM had not had this program, plants would need to stay open and make nothing or a protracted strike which, at the time, looked pretty expensive.

                  GM has been tight on profit for years and a strike would have killed the years profits.

                  Comment

                  • G B.
                    Expired
                    • December 1, 1974
                    • 1373

                    #10
                    Thanks for the explanation

                    I guess I've led a sheltered life. I've never heard of anything so foolish for a company to create as a "job bank".

                    I worked under "Employment at Will" terms in the engineering / construction business. As long as a company wanted to offer me a job and I wanted to take it, then we had a deal. However, if either of us wanted out at any time for any reason "or for no reason at all", then it was over.

                    Comment

                    • Michael H.
                      Expired
                      • January 29, 2008
                      • 7477

                      #11
                      Re: Thanks for the explanation

                      That must explain why so many people in my neighborhood are able to afford all those fancy new $40,000 SUV's, but never go to work. I guess I have a lot to learn about how the system works because I had to work most of my life.

                      Comment

                      • Lyle C.
                        Extremely Frequent Poster
                        • September 1, 1994
                        • 3228

                        #12
                        Re: What the hell is a "job bank"?

                        The job bank was used for classroom training and vacation replacement also. The money to pay the job bank came out of a different fund from closed plants.
                        Lyle

                        Comment

                        • Rick S.
                          Expired
                          • January 1, 2003
                          • 1203

                          #13
                          Re: Delphi Bankruptcy

                          According to todays Detroit Free Press, 21 top executives will get MORE money if they are laid off or fired. Prior to Friday, severance packages for white collar workers were limited to 12 months but now they eligible for 18 months of pay and some regular bonuses. Delphi's top 5 executives were paid $800,000 to 1 million last year. The top dog, Steve Miller got $1.5 million and a $3 million signing bonus. Gee, thats okay Mr. Miller, cut my hourly rate by 63%, change what I pay for medical coverage from 7% to 27% and possibly cut my pension benefit in half but are you doing the same?

                          Comment

                          • Clem Z.
                            Expired
                            • January 1, 2006
                            • 9427

                            #14
                            there are UAW workers that are now loosing

                            their home even though they make $80K a year because they are so deep in debt because they used their overtime to feed their habit and now with no OT they are in debt and they can not meet the payment. there was a story about one UAW that was making over $100K a year with over time that was $350K in debt. also there was a story about a fork lift driver that was still being paid $28 a hour but all he had to do was show for work because the plant was closed and there was nothing to lift. unions are OK but they have run their time and now common sense must prevail

                            Comment

                            • Chris H.
                              Very Frequent User
                              • May 1, 1990
                              • 805

                              #15
                              Re: What the hell is a "job bank"?

                              they could also do volunteer work.

                              Bottom line is the company was paying money out and getting nothing out of it. Hard to stay in business that way.

                              Comment

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