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Ford and GM debt reduced to junk bond status
By Nick Beams
9 May 2005
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If one had to select the three most powerful symbols of the
dominance of American industrial capitalism in the twentieth century
it would be hard to go past Ford, General Motors and International
Business Machines (IBM).
Ford pioneered the system of assembly-line production, which
became the basis for the expansion of American industry in the
1920s and then laid the foundations for the longest period of
growth in the world economy during the post-war boom.
General Motors became the largest manufacturing company in
the world, with its multi-divisional system of management forming
the standard for large-scale corporate organisation.
IBM was at the centre of the rise of the computer industry
after World War II. Indeed, so great was its supremacy that it
was virtually identified with it. When Stanley Kubrick made the
movie 2001: A Space Odyssey in 1968 he could think of no
better way to devise a name for the all-powerful supercomputer,
HAL, than to move back one letter in the alphabet from IBM.
Now these three giants of twentieth century capitalism confront
a crisis, one that signifies not just their own decline but more
broadly the decay of American capitalism as a whole.
Last week the credit-rating agency Standard & Poors
(S&P) announced it was reducing the corporate debt of both
Ford and General Motors to junk bond status. IBM, after earlier
selling off its personal computer division to a Chinese company,
unveiled a restructuring program including a pre-tax
write-off of between $1.3 billion and $1.7 billion and job cuts
of between 10,000 and 13,000.
While the downgrading of Ford and GM had been expected, the
severity of the cut, especially in the case of GM, which went
down two grades, sent a shiver through credit markets. Altogether
the amount of debt affected is $450 billion.
Announcing the GM cut, the S&P statement said the downgrade
to non-investment grade reflects our conclusion that managements
strategies may be ineffective in addressing GMs competitive
advantage. On Ford, the S&P statement said there was
scepticism about whether managements strategies will
be sufficient to counteract mounting competitive challenges.
S&P said its outlook for GM was negative, meaning
that its rating could be downgraded further. The most immediate
concern was that GMs sports utility vehicles (SUVs), on
which the company has been heavily dependent, would not be as
profitable in the future as in recent years. Recently ...
sales of its midsize and large SUVs have plummeted, and industry
wide demand has evidently stalled, partly because of high gas
prices. Also, competition has intensified due to a proliferation
of new SUVs.
The S&P statement warned that even with extensive
efforts to renew its products, GM continues to lose market share
in North America, despite an aggressive pricing strategyand
we believe the companys reliance on discounts has itself
been detrimental to its brand equity. In addition, it is questionable
whether GMs relative competitive standing had improved as
a result of extensive cost-cutting in its North American operations.
While GM had downsized its operations and curtailed excess production
capacity, its profits were still being undermined because of the
steady loss of market share.
The same problem is afflicting Ford. Even though the overall
American vehicle market has continued to expand, the share of
the two Detroit corporations has fallen. In April, while the market
for light vehicles increased by 1.8 percent to 1.5 million, GMs
sales dropped by 7.7 percent and Fords by nearly 5 percent.
GMs market share fell from 28 percent to 25.4 percent and
Fords from 19.8 percent to 18.4 percent.
International operations are not easing the domestic problems.
GMs European operations have been running at a loss since
1999 and losses there this year are expected to be substantial.
GM has been making healthy profits in China but that market is
starting to weaken and there is increased competition.
The decline in market share has had a severe impact on profits.
GM lost $1.1 billion for the March quarter, and announced it would
not make projections for the rest of the year. While Fords
profit for the quarter was $1.2 billion, this was a 38 percent
drop on last years results.
Pointing to what it called the precipitous fall
in GMs earnings in the recent period and the alarming
first quarter loss, the S&P statement said profitability could
remain poor for the rest of the year, and prospects for a return
to adequate profitability in the next few years are becoming increasingly
uncertain. While GM had substantial cash reserves, its
ability to withstand persistent financial performance is not unlimited.
In other words, if present trends continueand the drain
on cash-flow is expected to be in excess of $5 billion this
yearGM will go bankrupt.
At present, the parent company is being sustained by its financial
arm, General Motors Acceptance Corporation (GMAC). In terms of
the contribution to profits, GM passed some years ago from being
an industrial company with a financial arm, to an industrial offshoot
of a finance company. In 2004, GMAC made $2.9 billion of the groups
total net profits of $3.6 billion. Fords profits of $35
billion were also largely attributable to Ford Credit. However,
with interest rates in the US on the rise, financial profits could
start to fall as consumers cut back on borrowings.
Along with all other financial analysts, S&P pointed to
GMs burdensome post-retirement benefit obligations
as a major drain on profits. The companys unfunded retiree
medical liability, it noted, increased to $61 billion at the end
of last year, up from the already massive $57 billion
at the end of 2003. And these obligations could become even
more onerous. If GM were able to find some way to roll
back its health insurance benefits then it could reduce
a significant competitive disadvantage.
The Economists report on the Ford and GM downgrade
was headlined Two piles of junk? It noted that Fords
unfunded pension liability stood at $12.3 billion for the end
of 2004 while GMs legacy costs, which accounted for 2.3
percent of revenue in 1999, are expected to rise to 5 percent
this year. While both firms have substantial cash flows, the article
continued, it remains to be seen how long both firms can
remain solvent if their core operations continue to bleed money
and their legacy costs continue to grow. Bankruptcy no longer
seems far fetched. In fact, both Ford and GM may embrace
it as a way of slashing health-care and pension liabilities.
Another outcome of the crisis will be increased pressure on
the US administration to take punitive action against rival firms.
According to a report in Saturdays Financial Times (FT):
US carmakers are using growing congressional anger over
the weak Chinese renminbi to boost pressure on Japan and South
Korea to revalue their currencies as well, a move they hope could
ease competitive pressures on the beleaguered US industry.
The FT cited a paper prepared by the US car companies,
which complained that Japans weak yen policy has given
its exporters a huge subsidy and competitive advantage in the
US market, causing significant harm to US manufacturers.
Fifty years ago during Senate hearings, Charles Wilson, the
GM chairman, famously claimed that Whats good for
General Motors is good for the rest of America. Those remarks
came in the midst of the post-war boom, when American capitalism
was the industrial powerhouse of the world, providing increased
living standards for the working class at home and offering concessions
to the other major capitalist powers. No longer.
Now Ford and GM are beset by international competitors, their
industrial strength has severely eroded and they face a deepening
crisis of profitability. Their policies reflect those of the Bush
administration and American imperialism as a wholestepped
up pressure against foreign rivals combined with deeper attacks
on the living standards of the working class.
See Also:
GM announces sharply lower
profit figures
Decline of auto giant highlights crisis of US manufacturing
[18 March 2005]
General Motors: From
auto manufacturer to financial institution
[25 August 2003]
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