GM shares slide after record loss
By Jui Chakravorty and Kevin Krolicki
DETROIT (Reuters) - General Motors Corp (GM.N) posted its largest quarterly net loss on Wednesday, reflecting a $39 billion charge related to unclaimed tax credits and a deeper-than-expected loss at former finance subsidiary GMAC.
The massive charge and a cautious outlook from the largest U.S. automaker underscored the risks GM faces three years into a restructuring plan, suffering from stalling U.S. auto sales, a slumping housing market and rising oil prices.
GM's $39 billion charge ranked as the second-largest in U.S. corporate history, trailing only the $45.5 billion write-down AOL took in 2002 in the wake of its troubled merger with Time Warner, according to Standard & Poor's.
GM's third-quarter net loss ballooned to $39 billion, or $68.85 per share, compared with a loss of $147 million, or 26 cents per share a year earlier.
On the adjusted basis tracked by most analysts, GM's loss of $1.6 billion, or $2.80 per share excluding one-time items, was about eight times larger than the average forecast by Wall Street analysts.
GM Chief Financial Officer Fritz Henderson attributed that shortfall to losses in the United States, Canada and Europe and the previously reported loss at GMAC.
GM shares fell 5 percent in response. They are down almost 20 percent since October as investor attention shifted from its cost-saving labor pact with the United Auto Workers and toward more immediate challenges as the automaker tries to recover from combined losses of $12.4 billion over the past two years.
Bear Stearns analyst Peter Nesvold said the numbers showed "things are bad and getting worse" for GM.
Nesvold said investors had been too bullish about both the outlook for U.S. auto sales and the profit contribution GM was likely to realize next year from its stake in GMAC because of the ongoing weakness in the housing market.
"We simply aren't inclined to look through the root cause as just 'noncash, non-recurring items,'" Nesvold said in a note for clients.
GMAC, in which GM retains a 49 percent stake, posted a $1.6 billion third-quarter loss triggered by a $2.6 billion loss at its Residential Capital LLC unit, the second-largest independent U.S. mortgage lender.
Henderson said U.S. housing market weakness was also partly responsible for weaker U.S. auto sales. Industry-wide sales are on track for the lowest annual total in almost a decade at about 16 million units, and seen at risk for dropping further in 2008.
"The recent erosion in U.S. market conditions will likely result in GM's performance during 2008 and possibly into 2009, being weaker than originally anticipated," Moody's Investors Service said in a statement, lowering its credit rating outlook for GM to "stable" from "positive."
ANALYSTS DIVIDED
Analysts were divided on the significance of GM's $39 billion charge, which pushed the automaker to the second largest quarterly loss in U.S. corporate history and almost offsets the profits GM made during its period of sustained growth between 1993 and 2004. Continued...



