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Posts with tag AmericanAxleStrike

GM Axle supplier to give buyouts to 2,000 workers

General Motors Corp. (NYSE: GM) is not the only auto company in a world of hurt. Its vendors are as well. One of its larger suppliers, American Axle and Manufacturing Holdings, Inc. (NYSE: AXL) will likely be handing out buyout offers to a reported 2,000 U.S. workers. the official word will probably come tomorrow, when American Axlereports its Q2 earnings.

Expect more of this. As GM and other automakers like Ford Motor Co. (NYSE: F) reduce auto shipments, rearrange their product mixes and re-evaluate global strategies, the larger suppliers to those companies will see various levels of hits against them. Unfortunately, the U.S. auto industry is in for more hits throughout the remainder of 2008.

American Axle has an estimated 3,650 hourly workers in the U.S. -- so giving buyout offers to over half of them is a pretty significant step. In addition to that, between 200 and 350 U.S. salaried jobs with American Axle are being eliminated. The company also announced that it was reducing its average labor-hour cost down from above the $73 level to somewhere in the $40 range, saving it in the neighborhood of $300 million per year.

Newspaper wrap-up: GM plants to start production after strike settled

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  • According to Bloomberg, regulatory filings show that banks such as Citigroup Incorporated (NYSE: C) are failing to acknowledge at $35B of additional writedowns in their income statements.

Newspaper wrap-up: BHP CEO lashes out at Rio Tinto

MAJOR PAPERS:
  • The Wall Street Journal reported that Ford Motor Company (NYSE: F) CEO Alan Mulally isn't done cost-cutting. According to people close to the situation, Mulally is considering more job cuts, selling its Volvo brand and closing the troubled Mercury brand.
  • BHP Billiton Limited (NYSE: BHP) CEO Marius Kloppers strongly criticized Rio Tinto Plc (NYSE: RTP) and its CEO yesterday, the Financial Times reported. BHP Billiton has outperformed Rio Tinto in several areas, including share price appreciation and EPS growth, said Kloppers, adding, "On every metric I can envisage they [Rio] have been beaten."
OTHER PAPERS:
  • According to the Economic Times, AT&T Inc (NYSE: T) is reportedly in preliminary talks with Malaysia's Maxis Communications about buying its 74% stake in Indian cellular phone company Aircel, sources said.
  • The United Auto Workers union has rejected several "generous" benefit and wage proposals, according to American Axle & Manufacturing Holdings Inc (NYSE: AXL). In a statement yesterday, the Detroit News reported that American Axle said while tentative agreements had been reached on several issues, the UAW "repeatedly rejected" other proposals that were "considerably higher than the market rate."

Newspaper wrap-up: Microsoft will wait out Yahoo, and not raise its offer

MAJOR PAPERS:
  • If Yahoo! Inc (NASDAQ: YHOO) accepts a buyout offer from Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ: MSFT), it will have to be at the software maker's original offer of $44.6B. Microsoft won't raise the price, the Wall Street Journal reported, and the state of the economy might work in their favor.
  • The FAA said that landing gear made by Illinois-based AAR Corporation (NYSE: AIR), and used on hundreds of Boeing Company (NYSE: BA)-built aircraft, includes "unapproved" parts, the Wall Street Journal also reported.
  • Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc (NYSE: LEH) is thinking of not allowing its two British subprime mortgage units to provide any new loans. The Financial Times reported that the company may also order the units to put additional pressure on borrowers with a spotty credit history whose mortgages are coming to the end of fixed-rate terms.
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Last updated: December 02, 2008: 10:42 AM

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