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Chrysler CEO says "no need" for pension buyouts
Karen Brooks
Reuters
7:48 PM CDT, June 4, 2012
AUSTIN, Texas (Reuters) - The chief executive of Chrysler Group LLC said
there was "no need" for the No. 3 U.S. automaker to follow its larger U.S.
rivals in offering white-collar pension buyouts.
Both General Motors Co
and Ford Motor Co said they will offer pension buyouts to
white-collar retirees this year. The strategy will lower the automakers'
outsized pension obligations, which rose to record levels in 2011 and have been
a major concern for investors, analysts said.
Ford will extend its offer
to 98,000 people, while GM will approach 42,000 about swapping their monthly
pension checks for a one-time lump-sum payout.
"There's no need for us to
do it," CEO Sergio Marchionne said of the buyouts during a visit to a Fiat
dealership in Austin on Monday. He did not expand on his comments.
A
growing concern for decades as U.S. automakers lost market share to
foreign-based automakers in their home country, pension costs became an
albatross for the U.S. industry with the sector's downturn five years
ago.
Chrysler ended 2011 with a nearly $32 billion pension obligation and
its pension plans were underfunded by $6.5 billion, according to its annual
filing. The company's market value was around $7.5 billion at the end of
2011.
Chrysler has just over 130,000 retirees. About 30,000 are former
employees who were paid an annual salary while the rest are retired hourly
workers represented by the United Auto Workers union.
Marchionne, who is
also CEO of Italian automaker Fiat SpA , has been at the helm of
Chrysler since the U.S. automaker emerged from the brink of collapse before its
U.S.-funded bankruptcy in 2009.
At that time, analysts said Chrysler
would hold Fiat back, but in the last three years, the U.S. automaker has been
Fiat's main source of strength as Europe's auto market weakens.
Chrysler
sales in the United States have jumped about 30 percent while the overall U.S.
auto market has risen 13.4 percent during the first five months of the
year.
Fiat has delayed the launch of its Bravo and Grande Punto cars to
2014. By contrast, Marchionne has not slowed spending on vehicle development in
the United States.
"I have not slowed down one single dollar of spending
in the United States," Marchionne said. "As a matter of fact, I've probably
accelerated it in the last six months."
A sharp slowdown in jobs growth
last month raised fears on Wall Street that the U.S. economic recovery may be
foundering. Marchionne said the pace of the economy is slow, but there would not
be an economic contraction.
"If I have any concerns about the U.S. it's
the potential impact coming from Europe, but it's not from internal issues,"
Marchionne said.
(Reporting By Karen Brooks in Austin, Texas; additional
reporting by Deepa Seetharaman in Detroit; Editing by Phil
Berlowitz)
Copyright © 2012, Reuters