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An automobile dealership in Orland, California which closed after General Motors cut ties with it and several hundred other dealers as part of its Chapter 11 bankruptcy restructuring efforts in 2009 [1] Beginning in the latter half of 2008, a global-scale recession adversely affected the economy of the United States.
On Sunday, May 31, 2009, bankruptcy judge Arthur J. Gonzalez approved a proposed government restructuring plan and sale of Chrysler's assets. The sale allows most of the assets of Chrysler to be purchased by a new entity in which Fiat would own 20%, and the autoworker's union retirement health care trust (voluntary benefit association "VEBA") 55%, with the U.S. and Canadian government as ...
On May 30, 2009, it was announced that a deal had been reached to transfer New Opel (Opel plus Vauxhall, minus Saab) assets to a separate company majority-owned by a consortium led by Sberbank of Russia (35%), Magna International of Canada (20%), and Opel employees and car dealers (10%). GM was expected to keep a 35% minority stake in the new ...
The word "bankruptcy" has been much in the news lately thanks to the recent bankruptcy filing by collapsed crypto exchange FTX and reports that Elon Musk might take his recently acquired Twitter ...
In September 2008, the Big Three asked for $50 billion to pay for health care expenses and avoid bankruptcy and ensuing layoffs, and Congress worked out a $25 billion loan. [92] By December, President Bush had agreed to an emergency bailout of $17.4 billion to be distributed by the next administration in January and February. [ 93 ]
While automakers and suppliers are betting big on future demand for electric vehicles, a near-term global slowdown is causing pain, including bankruptcies, scrapped initial public offerings and ...
According to Experian’s latest State of the Automotive Finance Market report, the average interest rate on used cars for deep subprime borrowers with credit scores between 300 and 500 was 21.55% ...
As things stand, should anyone filing for bankruptcy fail to meet the Internal Revenue Service regulated ‘means test', they would instead be shelved into the Chapter 13 debt restructuring plan. Essentially, Chapter 13 bankruptcies simply tell borrowers that they must pay back some or all of their debts to all unsecured lenders. Repayments ...