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BUSINESS
Delphi Corp.,
the largest U.S. auto supplier, files for bankruptcy
DETROIT- Delphi Corp., the largest
U.S. auto supplier, filed for bankruptcy Saturday, sending shock waves
through the country's auto industry, which already is weakened by high
labour costs and falling market share. Delphi's bankruptcy, which is
expected to result in plant closures and layoffs, is one of the
largest in U.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 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 labour 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 US 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, No. 63 on the
2005 Fortune 500 list of the country's largest corporations, 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. Also Saturday, Robert Dellinger
was named executive vice-president and chief financial officer. The
former Sprint Corp. official succeeds acting CFO John Sheehan, who was
named Delphi's vice-president and chief restructuring officer. 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 labour 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 per cent, 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.
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