General Motors Co
posted a net loss for 2009, but said it was possible to make a profit
this year and that it was laying the foundation to return to public ownership.
GM reported a $4.3 billion 2009 net loss covering the period from its
emergence from bankruptcy in July through the end of the year in the
automaker's first full account of its new balance sheet as a
restructured company.
The automaker said it had repaid $2.8 billion of its loans from the U.S.
Treasury and Export
Development Canada by the end of March and planned to repay the
remaining $5.6 billion by June "at the latest."
GM, which received $50 billion of U.S. taxpayer support for the
restructuring, has aimed to move faster to jump-start sales and launch
an initial public offering that would allow the U.S. government to
reduce its majority stake in the automaker.
GM Chief Financial Officer
Chris Liddell said
he was "incredibly encouraged" by the company's progress in the first
quarter toward a profit in 2010 and said GM would never again find
itself in the financial position it experienced before the bankruptcy.
"There is nothing that I've seen in the first quarter -- which you'll
see in a month's time -- that changes my opinion that there is a good
chance that we will be profitable this year," Liddell said in a
conference call.
After accumulating losses of about $88 billion from 2005 through the
first quarter of 2009, GM's predecessor company fell into a
government-supported bankruptcy. The U.S. Treasury currently holds a
stake of more than 60 percent in the new GM.
The U.S. Treasury expects GM eventually to be strong enough to attract
sufficient investment and return to profitability. It had no comment on
GM's financial statement on Wednesday.
GM GENERATES CASH FROM JULY-DECEMBER
"I think they've got a modest to good chance of becoming profitable in
one of the quarters this year," said Mike Boudreau, of the turnaround
firm O'Keefe & Associates, citing improvements in the economy and
reduced structural costs.
GM generated $1 billion
of operating cash during the period from its emergence from bankruptcy
until the end of the year, but said significant work remained.
In the results released on Wednesday, GM said its losses from July to
the end of 2009 included a $2.6 billion pretax loss related to a United Auto Workers union
retiree healthcare program and $1.3 billion for foreign currency
adjustments.
For the fourth quarter, GM reported a $3.4 billion net loss and revenue
of $32.3 billion.
GM ended 2009 with $36.2 billion in cash, compared with $14.2 billion at
the end of 2008.
The restructuring helped the new GM eliminate debt and build its cash,
but the automaker's sales overall remain under pressure after its
elimination of unprofitable brands.
GM is shutting down the Pontiac, Saturn and Hummer brands and has sold
the Swedish Saab brand to Spyker
Cars (SPYKR.AS).
The automaker's U.S. sales were up 17 percent in the first quarter from a
year earlier when the industry was hitting its lowest levels since the
early 1980s and GM was sliding toward bankruptcy.
However, GM's U.S. market share of 18.7 percent in the first quarter was
down from 19.6 percent for all of 2009, a year in which it lost 2.5 percentage points of
U.S. share.
Chief Executive Ed
Whitacre, who replaced CEO Fritz Henderson in December, has shaken up senior management
including its sales and marketing teams in recent months to push for a
faster turnaround.
GM's global market share
dropped to 11.6 percent in 2009, down from 12.4 percent in 2008, with
sales overall at about 7.5 million vehicles last year including medium
and heavy trucks.
Liddell said GM did not need U.S. auto industry sales to increase
significantly in 2010 from last year for the company to be profitable
this year.
U.S. auto industry sales fell to about 10.4 million vehicles in 2009,
the worst result since the early 1980s. Most industry experts expect
sales to increase to a range of 11.5 million vehicles to 12.5 million in
2010.
David Mikael Taclino
Inyu Web Development and Design
Creative Writer
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