The Militant Libertarian

I'm pissed off and I'm a libertarian. What else you wanna know?

Sunday, May 10, 2009

Attack on the Chrysler Capitalists

by Peter Schiff

The Obama administration singled out hedge funds as the bad guys this week in its attempt to reorganize Chrysler.

The accusation falls comfortably into the administration's view that unfettered capitalists on Wall Street and poor planning by short-sighted CEO's are responsible for our financial problems.

Reacting to the setback, President Obama took dead aim at the few capitalists left: the owners of some of Chrysler's securitized bank debt – hedge funds and private investors – who scuttled the plan.

He described these "holdouts" as unwilling to make the sacrifices that the company, the banks, the workers, the pensioners (all on the government dole) and the taxpayers had been prepared to make for the good of the country.

Ironically, the "greedy" group that Obama holds responsible for killing the auto industry is the only force that can save it.

These ideas, echoed in Congress, the media and on Main Street, completely ignore how government intervention incentivized the bad behavior and brought down our economy.

The investors' reluctance to cave in sends Chrysler to bankruptcy court. Normally, this process would be the best means to reallocate Chrysler's assets in a way that benefits our economy. But Obama made it clear that this will be no ordinary bankruptcy.

The guiding hand of Washington had already formulated its far-sighted plan to save Chrysler, and it is meant to strongarm those who won't cooperate.

President Obama is out to restructure Wall Street. As a result, expect a cram-down rather than a negotiation. The sanctity of the bank debt holder's investment contracts will crumble under the political weight of Obama's vision.

Chrysler has not been profitable for years; and with Washington calling all the shots, the potential for long-term viability has been dashed.

A real bankruptcy is the only solution. In it, current shareholders get wiped out, current contracts and obligations are voided, and the remaining assets, both physical and intellectual, are sold to the highest bidders. But the process would create the opportunity for new management, with private capital, to buy auto-producing assets for pennies on the dollar, hire skilled auto workers at much lower costs, scrap out-of-date business practices, and produce cars cheaply and profitably. Under the guise of "saving jobs," the Administration has disrupted this process.

In contrast to the holdouts, the administration claims consensus of all major stakeholders. But this ignores how government has tilted the playing field. Billions of dollars of TARP and bailout subsidies have compromised the ability of the big banks and the Chrysler Board to make decisions independent of politics. The independence retained by the holdouts is a thorn that will, unfortunately, be quickly removed.

Giving control of Chrysler, and soon GM, to the UAW and the government will enshrine a culture of failure and seal Detroit's fate. Both companies will become government-sponsored entities, not too dissimilar from Amtrak or the Post Office, forever relying on taxpayer funds to create products of dubious quality.

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