skip to main content
|

Financial News

Friday July 3, 12:50 AM
Ross among funds considering Delphi bid -- sources

By Kevin Krolicki and Jui Chakravorty DETROIT (DETROIT.SN - news) /NEW YORK, July 2 (Reuters) - Billionaire investor Wilbur
Ross is among those considering a bid for the assets of bankrupt auto parts supplier Delphi Corp (DPHIQ.PK - news) , two people with knowledge of the matter said on Thursday.

Hedge fund Elliott Management is also preparing a credit bid for Delphi, which was spun off by General Motors Corp (NYSE: GM - news) in 1999, the sources said.

The interest by both investors could complicate an effort by Delphi to complete a deal to sell its assets to GM and private equity firm Platinum Equity LLC.

Delphi could not be immediately reached for comment.

Ross declined to comment.

'As you know, our policy is not to comment on rumors,' Ross said in an email to Reuters.

Ross is no stranger to the auto parts business, having built an interiors supplier in part by combining the business of the former Collins & Aikman and the interiors business of Lear Corp in recent years.

Ross also has been known as a consolidator in other distressed industries, such as steel and coal. In an interview in December, Ross said he did not see how Delphi would survive a GM bankruptcy.

The four-year Delphi bankruptcy has been a cash drain for GM, which is now also operating in bankruptcy as it seeks permission to sell most of its assets to a new company funded by the U.S. Treasury.

As part of a deal brokered by the Obama administration's autos task force, GM would take over Delphi's steering business and four other U.S. plants.

The rest of the Delphi business, which includes its international operations, would be sold to Platinum in a $3.6 billion deal.

GM has agreed to provide $2 billion in funding to Beverly Hills, California-based Platinum, the automaker has said.

Platinum said it was confident its bid would be approved by the bankruptcy court overseeing the Delphi reorganization.

'As Delphi's court supervised bankruptcy reorganization reaches culmination, we are confident that our offer will be validated as the highest and best before the court,' Platinum principal Mark Barnhill said in a statement.

'We have never been the only prospective bidder in the process, nor even necessarily the favored bidder. But we have persevered with only one objective: Putting the strongest and most comprehensive solution on the table and delivering value for all of Delphi's stakeholders.'

BANKRUPTCY COURT SHOWDOWN

In a statement filed with the bankruptcy court last month, Delphi Chief Financial Officer John Sheehan supported the proposed Platinum deal and detailed the negotiations involving the company, GM and U.S. government officials that had led to it.

But Elliott Management opposes the Platinum offer on the grounds it undervalues Delphi's assets and has said it would make a credit bid using the amount it is owed under Delphi's bankruptcy loan.

Through affiliate firms, Elliott purchased a large share of Delphi's debtor-in-possession financing in the secondary market in June, according to two people with knowledge of the transaction.

Until that point, hedge fund Sliver Point Capital had led a group of DIP lenders in negotiations with Delphi and U.S. officials in seeking a larger recovery in cash and ownership of a reorganized company, court filings show.

The amount of Delphi's bankruptcy loan held by Elliott has not been disclosed.

In his affidavit, Sheehan said a new investor had become the largest bankruptcy lender in June at a time when the largest tranche of those loans was trading near 20 cents on the dollar. The statement did not identify Elliott by name.

Delphi has $3.29 billion in outstanding DIP financing, with over 80 percent of that in a 'Tranche C' facility projected to recover about 20 cents on the dollar under the Platinum deal.

In a win for Elliott, the U.S. bankruptcy judge overseeing the case denied earlier this week a request from Delphi that would have reimbursed Platinum up to $30 million in expenses if its proposed deal is unsuccessful.

Judge Robert Drain said the $30 million payout was 'not reasonable or appropriate.'

A court hearing on the Delphi sale is scheduled for July 23. The case is In re: Delphi Corp et al, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Southern District of New York, No. 05-44481.

(Reporting by Kevin Krolicki and Jui Chakravorty; additional reporting by David Bailey; editing by Andre Grenon) Keywords: DELPHI/

Send Article by Email  |  Send Article by IM  |  Blog This with Y! 360  |  Printable View

AFP logo

DETROIT
DETROIT.SN
0.00
+0.00%
Delphi Corp.
DPHIQ.PK
0.02
+0.00%
General Motors
GM
0.75
+0.00%
THOMSON REUTERS
TRI.TO
34.72
+1.52%
FTSE 100  Gainers  Losers
FTSE 250 Quotes by Sector
Dow Jones  Nasdaq  S&P 500
DAX 30   Eurostoxx 50
 

Recession

  Just how deep is the trough?
Banking Crisis
 

Are the banks out of the woods?

Stock Market Crash
  Explaining the global market turmoil
Money saving Tips
 

How to beat the credit crunch

Isn't Finance Funny?
 

Scandals and silliness


Message Boards
Property Pensions
Savings Utilities
UK Stocks Investing
Speach bubble House prices falling, rents falling
Speach bubble YOU WERE CREATED BY GOD FOR GOD AND WITHOUT GOD IN YOUR LIFE YOU ARE DEFEATED
Speach bubble What kind of people post on this board?
Speach bubble Are American women with brains welcome here?
Speach bubble BNP Paribas predict UKP/euro parity

Add to My Yahoo/RSS
AFX UK


Top Headlines


All RSS Feeds

Archives of