Email | Print    Type Size  -  +

Christmas or Halloween for GM?

President Bush laid the treats under the tree. Here's the trick: Making them work.

By Alex Taylor III, senior editor
Last Updated: December 19, 2008: 3:37 PM ET

Are you more likely to buy a car from GM or Chrysler after Friday's bailout?
  • Yes
  • No

Find your next Car


NEW YORK (Fortune) -- Be careful what you wish for. After days of publicly prevaricating, the Bush administration finally gave General Motors and Chrysler the Christmas present they had been longing for: a short-term loan to get them over the hump until they can negotiate a better deal from the incoming Obama team.

It is far better than a lump of coal, but it presents a few hoops the industry hoped it wouldn't have to jump through: setting limits on executive compensation, forbidding dividends and demanding concessions from the UAW but not the deeply entrenched auto dealers.

The bailout also appears to require the auto companies to show a "net present value" by the end of the first quarter of 2009, but it doesn't visibly explain what that involves.

This last provision is the most troubling. From all appearances, the first quarter of 2009 will represent the absolute nadir of the current recession. Economic activity will be about as lively as the Bataan death march.

For a change, the auto companies have recognized this up front by slashing production. That will lessen their opportunities to swamp dealers with unsaleable cars, but it won't do much for their income statements. Production is the lifeblood of the industry; when Detroit doesn't build any cars, it doesn't make any money.

That's one reason why Wagoner's comments in response to the bailout at a Friday news conference were so disturbing. Since GM will have very little in the way of revenue coming in early next year, how is it going to meet the government's test of "net present value?"

You have to get the money somewhere, and in GM's case, that means more cost-cutting. Yet nowhere did Wagoner offer any hints on how that is going to get done. No reorganizations were announced, no merging of departments, no elimination of nameplates, no disposal of assets.

Wagoner needs to take some cost-cutting lessons from Chrysler CEO Bob Nardelli, who has shown the door to two more executives: marketing boss Deborah Wahl Meyer and Asia chief Phil Murtagh. New to Chrysler and the auto industry, Nardelli doesn't have any emotional ties that conflict with his drive to make Chrysler solvent.

All Wagoner did on Friday was fall back on his familiar tropes of "build better cars, attain technology leadership, improve product quality." That would have been fine 20 years ago but GM's foreign competitors have moved well beyond such price-of-admission requirement and are operating at a higher level.

As for his suggestion that naysayers "please sit in and drive a Chevy Malibu", it calls to mind the comment by former GM Roger Smith in the late 1980s. When asked what he recommended for buyers who wanted to get a GM car but could only afford to spend $8,000, Smith replied, "a second-hand Buick."

Malibu is one of the best cars GM makes but it is only competitive with - and generally not superior to - competitors from Toyota, Honda, and Nissan. One of the dangers of working at GM for so long is that everything becomes self-referential after a while. From the inside Malibu looks special because it is so much better than everything else GM makes. From the outside, Malibu is just another car in a hotly contested segment.

That's a lesson that GM needs to learn - and soon - before the government money runs out. To top of page

CompanyPrice% Change
YRC Worldwide Inc 1.03 -9.65%
Gannett Co Inc 15.44 7.15%
Chiquita Brands International Inc 17.78 6.34%
Micron Technology Inc 9.93 5.53%
Dec 23 3:53pm ET †
IndexLast% Change
Dow Jones10,466.440.01%
Nasdaq2,269.640.75%
S&P 5001,120.590.23%
10yr96 30/32Yield: 3.74%
Dec 23 †
CompanyPrice% Change
Micron Technology Inc 9.93 5.47%
eBay Inc 24.00 4.71%
Yahoo! Inc 16.61 3.96%
Electronic Arts Inc 17.72 3.81%
Dec 23 3:58pm ET †
More Galleries
Biggest losers: Where Americans aren't moving Through most of the decade Florida was one of the fastest growing states. But the sunny clime -- and 6 others -- lost more residents than they gained in the year ended July 1. More
8 hot cars: Class of 2000 In just 10 years, the market's changed a lot when it comes to cars. Where are these models now? The Prius became a hit; the Aztek got killed. More
Obama's Main Street favorites President Obama meets often with small business owners, peppering his speeches with their stories. We checked in with 6 entrepreneurs touted by the President to find out how they handle health care. More
Sponsors
* : Time reflects local markets trading time.† - Intraday data delayed 15 minutes for Nasdaq, and 20 minutes for other exchanges.• Disclaimer