U.S. won't be active GM shareholder: sources

Tue May 26, 2009 11:15pm BST
 
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By Glenn Somerville and David Lawder

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. government wants to be as inactive a shareholder in General Motors Corp as possible if it ends up taking an ownership stake during a reorganization of the automaker, sources said on Tuesday.

"We are reluctant, somewhat involuntary shareholders in this situation," one of the sources said. "We want to be shareholders for as short a period of time and almost in as inactive a way as we can responsibly be."

The government would not engage in day-to day management of the automaker, in which it would take a majority stake, the source said. "We're not going to put U.S. government people, employees on the board," the source said.

GM, the largest U.S. automaker, is considered to be close to following Chrysler Corp into bankruptcy.

The sources said Chrysler, which entered bankruptcy on April 30, is nearly ready to emerge from it in restructured form but they refused to specify how soon.

"I wouldn't want to speculate on a precise day but I think we're pretty close to the end," one of the sources said in response to a question on whether a reorganized Chrysler might be unveiled as early as this week.

GM bondholders have so far balked at a debt-for-equity swap that would be needed for the company to avoid bankruptcy, though the sources said the government feels they got a fair offer and still hopes they might sign on.

"We're going to do everything we can ... to have peace in the valley and a happy outcome," one of the sources said. "We certainly prefer peace in the valley, but not in a way that's unfair to taxpayers or other stakeholders."  Continued...

 

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