President Barack Obama seized the wheel of the failing U.S. auto industry on Monday, forcing out General Motors Corp's chief executive, pushing Chrysler LLC toward a merger and threatening bankruptcy for both.
Major U.S. stock indexes opened sharply lower following the harsher-than-expected medicine for the distressed U.S. auto companies whose fortunes have steadily worsened amid recession and consumer credit woes this year.
All three of the major U.S. stock indexes fell more than 3 percent on the developments out of Washington, which prompted Standard & Poor's lead auto analyst to say that the bankruptcy risk for all three domestic automakers, including Ford Motor Co, remains high.
GM shares lost 24 percent while Ford was off 7.5 percent. Chrysler is privately held by Cerberus Capital Management.
"Given where the industry is, these highly unprecedented actions are consistent with the unprecedented times we're in," S&P's Robert Schulz said in an interview.
Obama was to detail his plan for overhauling the car industry as a new poll of analysts showed Detroit and top foreign automakers are expected to report another severe sales decline for March later this week.
Obama's task force on autos rejected turnaround plans submitted by both GM and Chrysler following their December bailout of $17.4 billion. The bailout required the companies to reach new concessions and lay out a case for survival.
Nevertheless, a senior administration official said "we want to do everything" to try and save the companies.
THE OBAMA PLAN
Obama is promising only to fund GM's operations for the next 60 days while it develops a sweeping restructuring plan, instead of granting GM's request for up to a further $16 billion in loans.
GM CEO Rick Wagoner, who had presided over the company's rapid decline in the past five years and had run the automaker since 2000, was forced out at the request of the autos panel headed by former investment banker Steve Rattner. A majority of GM's board will also be replaced.
"We are left to look back and say that Wagoner's appointment as both chairman and CEO in 2003 was little more than an act to ensure the dynasty of GM boardroom arrogance and failure continued," said Howard Wheeldon, senior strategist at brokerage BGC Partners.
Wheeldon said Wagoner's departure had been all but inevitable since the automaker sought government funds and said he was disappointed the authorities had not insisted on an external replacement.
Wagoner protege and GM President and Chief Operating Officer Fritz Henderson was named as new CEO. Wagoner's departure came as the Obama administration came under fire for not blocking bonuses to executives at American International Group Inc.
NOT JUST GM
Chrysler was deemed by the task force to be not viable as a stand-alone company and was given 30 days to complete an alliance with Italy's Fiat or face a cut-off of its government funding that could force its liquidation.
Fiat was not immediately available for comment.
The autos panel rejected a claim by Cerberus that Chrysler could be viable on its own, citing its relatively small size, weak product line-up and declining U.S. market share.
Chrysler wanted $5 billion in new aid.
If Chrysler can complete a tie-up with Fiat and cost-saving deals with creditors and its major union, the Treasury would consider investing up to another $6 billion, officials said.
U.S. officials said there had been progress in recent negotiations involving the task force. Fiat had agreed to take less than the 35 percent stake in Chrysler that the two companies had first negotiated, the senior official said.
The Obama administration had also not ruled out a quick bankruptcy process for either GM or Chrysler, he said.
OTHER MOVES
The moves in Washington came after Europe's No. 2 carmaker by sales PSA Peugeot Citroen ousted CEO Christian Streiff, replacing him with former Corus head Philippe Varin from June 1. PSA Peugeot Citroen shares fell 7.7 percent in Europe.
PSA Chairman Thierry Peugeot said in a statement the exceptional difficulties faced by the industry warranted a change in management, but Streiff defended himself saying his policies had equipped the group to weather the storm.
Some analysts viewed the appointment of Varin positively.
Separately, the senior labor leader of GM's German brand Opel, being spun off with the UK's Vauxhall and seeking investors and government support, said the move was overdue.
Russia's Avtovaz bucked the trend, its shares surging after Prime Minister Vladimir Putin pledged 20 billion rubles in aid, while Spain's plan to grant subsidies for green cars won approval from the European Commission.