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None of the publicly owned stocks or bonds issued by the former General Motors Corporation (now renamed "Motors Liquidation Company"), including its common stock formerly traded on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol "GM", are or will become securities of General Motors Company (the "new GM"), which is an independent separate ...
Motors Liquidation Company (MLC), formerly General Motors Corporation, was the company left to settle past liability claims from Chapter 11 reorganization of American car manufacturer General Motors. It exited bankruptcy on March 31, 2011, only to be carved into four trusts; the first to settle the claims of unsecured creditors, the second to ...
In 2009, GM had renamed itself as General Motors Company, creating its former appellation: General Motors Corporation. On May 30, 2009, it was announced that a deal had been reached to transfer GM's Opel assets to a separate company, majority-owned by a consortium led by Sberbank of Russia (35%), Magna International (20%), and Opel employees (10%).
The proposed GM public offering has some unusual qualities. For starters, it's not very common for a company to have an IPO a year after filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. It has another unique ...
GM stock hit a 52-week high of $61.24 in December and is up 47% year to date — far ahead of its Big Three peers. Ford's stock is down 15% in 2024, while Stellantis shares have dropped nearly 40%.
Can General Motors (NYS: GM) be saved? In many ways, it seems like a ridiculous thing to ask. GM sold more cars than any other automaker last year, while generating record profits. GM's debt is ...
The value of that stock, options and pension has been lost in the bankruptcy restructuring that Congress approved for GM. GM sent letters to tens of thousands of their dealers, supplier executives, employees and union members, asking recipients to call and write Congress with several "talking points" about the potential effects of a GM bankruptcy.
Industrials editor Brendan Byrnes discusses GM hitting a post-bankruptcy low. This looks like a very attractive entry point, as the stock trades at only five times earnings. While the auto company ...