Word: kerkorian
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Billionaire Kirk Kerkorian has ended his $22.8 billion hostile bid for Chrysler in what TIME Detroit Bureau Chief William McWhirter calls "an artless folly of comical proportions--the worst single deal in the history of money." Kerkorian, who said today through a spokesman that he has no plans to sell his 36 million shares, had offered to increase his ownership to 90% of Chrysler ina deal backed by former Chrysler chairman Lee Iacocca. "This deal simply couldn't be done," says McWhirter. "None of the traditional debt instruments were there to finance it, and no syndicate bank wanted that type...
What if you threw a takeover party and no investors came? Las Vegas financier Kirk Kerkorian was in that predicament last week as his bid to acquire Chrysler for $23 billion, or $55 a share, seemed close to collapse. Not a single bank or financial partner has come forward to provide cash for the buyout since Kerkorian and former Chrysler chairman Lee Iacocca proposed it on April 12. That lack of support has caused Chrysler stock, which jumped nearly $10 a share to $48.75 on the day of the announcement, to fall back since then and close last week...
...auto-industry downturn that would slash profits and the value of their investments. Chrysler recently reported first-quarter earnings of $592 million, down a steep 36% from the same period a year ago. Further declines in business could hit Chrysler particularly hard under the plan advanced by Kerkorian, which would load up the company with $10.7 billion of new debt while draining $5 billion from its $7.5 billion of cash reserves to help pay for the buyout. Chrysler has done its part to kill the deal by hinting that it would stop doing business with investment-banking firms that raised...
...this may leave Kerkorian with little choice other than to sell the 10% of Chrysler stock he owns (it has gained $152 million just since he launched the bid), which would fetch him a profit of $1 billion at current prices. Not bad for a rejected suitor...
Chrysler's board of directors today formally rejected the$22.8 billion bid by corporate investor Kirk Kerkorian to buy the company,saying the unsolicited offer was disruptive and not in the best interests of shareholders. In today's trading, Chrysler's stock was down half a point to $44 5/8, well below the $55-a-share proposed takeover price. Chrysler also announced that it will use excess cash to increase the dividend or buy back shares, moves that could help shareholders...