Canadian taxpayers lose $3.5-billion on 2009 bailout of auto firms
The federal government's sale of the remaining 73.389 million common shares it held in GM will close the book on the investment in that company and Chrysler
The federal government's sale of the remaining 73.389 million common shares it held in GM will close the book on the investment and the auto maker's period of being derided as "Government Motors."
Ottawa will raise about $3.2-billion from the sale, based on a report from Bloomberg Tuesday that the stake it sold to Goldman Sachs & Co. was priced at $35.90 (U.S.) a share.
A report on the auto rescue done by the Auditor-General last year said the two governments had received $5.4-billion (Canadian) of the $13.7-billion they contributed to the bailouts of the two auto giants.
Since then, GM bought back about $400-million (U.S.) in preferred shares and the Ontario government sold its remaining shares for $1.1-billion (Canadian), before the final sale by the federal government this week. That brings the total proceeds to the governments to around $10.2-billion.
The share sale by Ottawa will help federal Finance Minister Joe Oliver balance the federal budget.
But Jerry Dias, president of Unifor, which represents workers at GM plants in Oshawa, Ont., St. Catharines, Ont., and Ingersoll, Ont., said the government should have kept its shares and used the ownership as leverage to force GM to re-invest in Oshawa and St. Catharines.
"It is remarkably short-sighted of the federal government to sell off its shares in GM at a time when there has been widespread agreement that securing GM's future in Canada is critical," Mr. Dias said in a statement.
Unifor has been meeting with GM officials both in Detroit and the Canadian head office in Oshawa to lobby for new investment in St. Catharines and Oshawa. General Motors of Canada Ltd. announced earlier this year that the auto maker and suppliers will invest about $540-million at the plant in Ingersoll to make the next generation of the Chevrolet Equinox crossover utility vehicle.
"The federal government is selling off its shares for short-term political gain, as it prepares its last budget before the next federal election. We need leaders with more vision, strategy and savvy than this," Mr. Dias said. "At some point very soon, the federal and provincial governments are going to have to take decisive action to secure the future of GM."
Federal and provincial cabinet ministers have also met with senior GM officials to urge the company to find new vehicles for two Oshawa assembly plants and invest in St. Catharines, where the auto maker operates an engine and transmission plant.
One of the two Oshawa factories is scheduled to close next year, while the plant known as the flex plant has no new products allocated to it. Production of the Chevrolet Camaro will be shifted out of the flex plant to a factory in Lansing, Mich., later this year.
GM Canada president Stephen Carlisle has said that no decisions on new vehicles for the Oshawa plants will be made before 2016 and negotiations with Unifor on a new contract.
Unifor issued an economic impact study on the Oshawa plants last week that showed the two governments stand to lose $1-billion in tax revenue if they are permanently closed.
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