Die Detroit News schreibt, dass die Aktionäre sich 500 Millionen Dollar teilen müssen. Die erste öffentliche Zahl die ich gefunden habe. Vergisst meine Rechungen und orientiert ich mal lieber hierdran als Mindestmaß. 500 Mio Dollar / 561,8 Mio Aktionäre = 0,89 Cent / Aktie Außerdem werden über 20 Fabriken noch abgewickelt. Wie genau und ob die Aktionäre noch was bekommen wurde nicht gesagt. Die Kanzlei schreibt mir sie sei mit der Abwicklung beauftragt. Was auch immer sie genau damit meinen. Diese 20 Firmen sind in der DPH Holdings Co. zusammengefasst. Überschüsse hieraus würde dann an die Akionäre fliessen. Die Firma der Gläubiger ist die DIP Holding Co. Name kann noch verändert werden. Also kein Totalverlust. Auschnitt aus dem Aritkel www.detnews.com/article/20090731/AUTO01/907310345/...-year-bankruptcy - Die wichtigen Textpassagen habe ich mit rot für euch markiert. Judge clears way for Delphi to exit 4-year bankruptcy David Shepardson / The Detroit News New York -- The end of Delphi Corp.'s nearly four-year trip through bankruptcy is in sight. U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Robert Drain on Thursday swept aside a remaining objection and approved a plan to sell the auto supplier to its lenders. That will allow the Troy-based auto parts maker to emerge from bankruptcy by Sept. 30. Drain authorized the sale of most of Delphi's assets to bankruptcy lenders for the $3.5 billion they are owed. elphi's board of directors this week opted for the bid of the company's creditors over one initially backed by the U.S. Treasury Department and its former parent, General Motors Co. Delphi CEO Rodney O'Neal will stay on as chief executive, it was disclosed Thursday. Executive Chairman Robert S. "Steve" Miller, who was CEO until 2007, still plans to step down as chairman when the company emerges, spokesman Lindsey Williams said. Delphi's lenders, including Elliott Management, Silver Point Capital and Monarch Alternative Capital, will select a new board of directors that will choose a new chairman for the privately held company that will initially be known as DIP Holding Co. until it can be renamed Delphi for legal reasons. A separate company, DPH Holdings Co., will work to sell off Delphi's remaining noncore assets like 20 shuttered auto plants. A longtime GM and Delphi executive, John C. Brooks, will be CEO of that company. Under the rejected offer, Platinum Equity LLC was to buy Delphi in a $3.6 billion deal, with $2.5 billion in financing from GM. Platinum, however, will receive $30.5 million to defray its expenses. When it filed for bankruptcy, Delphi had 50,000 U.S. employees. But by late this year, Delphi will have shrunk to four U.S. plants and trimmed its U.S. work force to no more than 12,700 employees. Under the reorganization, stockholders, who once stood to get nearly $500 million, will be wiped out. Unsecured creditors will see little of what they were owed. The Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp., the government-owned insurer, will assume a $6.2 billion liability to take over Delphi's pension plans. Bonuses due Delphi's executives were eliminated. Gruß Marlboromann
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