May 28, 2009 Thursday
Updated

May 28, 2009
Chrysler fights for deal
Chrysler's attorneys say unloading the assets to a group led by Italy's Fiat Group SpA is Chrylsler's only hope to avoid selling itself off piece-by-piece. -- PHOTO: AFP
NEW YORK - CHRYSLER tried to fend off hundreds of objections on Wednesday to its plan to sell most of its assets to an Italian automaker, hoping in a marathon court session to save itself from liquidation.

The company was waiting to see whether Judge Arthur Gonzalez of US bankruptcy court would approve the sale. If he does, Chrysler could emerge from bankruptcy within weeks.

The hearing was expected to continue well into Wednesday night, with a decision from the judge perhaps not coming until the wee hours of Thursday morning.

Attorneys for Chrysler say unloading the assets to a group led by Italy's Fiat Group SpA is the company's only hope to avoid selling itself off piece-by-piece. They say a leaner Chrysler could shift more easily to smaller, more fuel-efficient cars.

But many Chrysler dealers, debtholders and former employees say they are being steamrolled by the bankruptcy proceedings. Fiat could back out if the deal doesn't close by June 15.

On the other hand, by emerging so soon from bankruptcy protection, Chrysler would defy skeptics who insisted such a filing would leave the automaker mired in court for many months.

Both Chrysler LLC and General Motors Corp, which now appears almost certain to file for bankruptcy protection, have been hobbled by the health and pension costs of tens of thousands of unionized retirees, in addition to slumping sales.

Bringing Chrysler and Fiat together would dramatically change the face of the country's third-largest automaker. The current plan calls for Fiat to bring a handful of its small cars to the US in the coming years, filling one of Chrysler's biggest product gaps and pleasing a White House intent on making the nation's fleet of automobiles greener.

Chrysler itself entered bankruptcy with a handful of new vehicles in the works. It plans to begin selling an electric car next and have six electric vehicles on the road by 2014.

Even if Chrysler comes out of bankruptcy, its challenges are just beginning. Until the Fiat vehicles arrive, it will have to rely on a product lineup that lost billions of dollars last year. -- AP

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