Saturday April 21, 12:45 AM
Kerkorian seeks meeting with Chrysler employee group
DETROIT, April 20 (Reuters) - Representatives of
billionaire investor Kirk Kerkorian are seeking a meeting with
a group of Chrysler workers proposing an employee-led buyout of
the automaker to consider some form of a cooperation, a person
familiar with the effort said on Friday.
A renegade group of Chrysler workers in Toledo, Ohio, has
formed an "employee buyout committee" and sent a formal
proposal to Chrysler, the company said on Friday.
The bid comes in the wake of a $4.5 billion offer for
Chrysler from Kerkorian's investment company, Tracinda Corp.
The Tracinda offer includes a provision that a "substantial"
share of equity in the automaker would be handed over to its
major union, the United Auto Workers.
A person familiar with Tracinda's proposal said the
investment company saw areas of common interest between its
offer and the proposed employee buyout. As a result, Tracinda
is seeking a meeting with the employee group to see if there
are potential areas of cooperation, the person said.
Chrysler Group spokesman Mike Aberlich said the proposal
from the employee group had been received by Chrysler Chief
Executive Tom LaSorda.
"It's been forwarded to the people that are looking at the
options," he said.
Details of the employee buyout offer were not immediately
available, and representatives of the employee group could not
be reached for comment.
UAW spokesman Roger Kerson could not be reached for
comment.
A second person familiar with the sale process said the
employee buyout proposal was being studied by the UAW and
Chrysler's corporate parent, DaimlerChrysler AG
.
Analysts expect the UAW to be central to any final
deliberations needed to clinch a deal to sell Chrysler.
In one sign of the UAW's influence in the sector, private
equity firm Cerberus Capital Management indicated this week
that it would withdraw from a $3.4 billion investment to
support Delphi Corp.'s emergence from bankruptcy
after failing to close a deal on labor costs with the union.
UAW President Ron Gettelfinger, who sits on
DaimlerChrysler's supervisory board, said this week that he
would press Daimler to retain Chrysler.
Daimler strategy chief Ruediger Grube has been in New York
for talks with a number of bidders for Chrysler, and one person
familiar with the situation has said preliminary talks could be
completed as soon as May.
Bidders for Chrysler include private-equity firms Cerberus
Capital Management [CBS.UL] and Blackstone Group [BG.UL] and
Canadian auto parts maker Magna International Inc. ,
according to people familiar with the bids.
Kerkorian's $4.5 billion bid is the only offer that has
been made public.
Gettelfinger told reporters on Wednesday that he had met
potential Chrysler buyers, adding that the UAW was opposed to
any bid from "strip-and-flip" financial investors.
DaimlerChrysler Chief Executive Dieter Zetsche said in
February all options were open for Chrysler, which lost nearly
$1.5 billion in 2006 as buyers shifted away from the light
trucks and sport utility vehicles that generated two-thirds of
its total sales.
Chrysler plans to cut 13,000 jobs as it seeks to return to
profitability by 2008.
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