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d-27805House OversightOther

General Motors bankruptcy overview and financial history

The passage provides a historical financial summary of GM and explains its bankruptcy due to pension costs and competitiveness. It contains no new allegations, no links to political figures, intellige GM founded in 1908, peaked in cash flow and market cap before 2009 bankruptcy Pension and OPEB liabilities grew to 4.8% of annual expenses Bankruptcy filing in 2009 attributed to uncompetitive produc

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #021057
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage provides a historical financial summary of GM and explains its bankruptcy due to pension costs and competitiveness. It contains no new allegations, no links to political figures, intellige GM founded in 1908, peaked in cash flow and market cap before 2009 bankruptcy Pension and OPEB liabilities grew to 4.8% of annual expenses Bankruptcy filing in 2009 attributed to uncompetitive produc

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bankruptcyautomotive-industrycorporate-financehouse-oversightpension-liabilities

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When Corporations Like General Motors Run Out of Cash, Eventually They File for Bankruptcy General Motors Balance Sheet, 2000 —CQ1:09 6/09 — 3 Largest Bankruptcy Filing in USA History mas Cash & Marketable Securities am Assets (ex. Cash) mas Accrued Pension + OPEB Liabilities as Liabilities (ex. Pension & OPEB) =—O=—Net Worth (Shareholders’ Equity) Assets / Liabilities / Net Worth ($B) ce Note: *includes cash & equivalents, as well as marketable securities; **short-term debt also includes current portion of long- KP term debt. Source: General Motors. (@ 4] www.kpcb.com USA Inc. | Consequences of Inaction 431 General Motors — Entitlement Spending Became Too Onerous for this Great American Company 1908 — Founded in Flint, Michigan to manufacture automobiles 1954 — Shipped 50 millionth automobile 1988 — Free cash flow peaked at $6.3B 1999 — Reached a peak market capitalization of $61B 2006 — Revenue peaked at $207B 2009 — Filed for bankruptcy Why did GM file for bankruptcy? Products became increasingly uncompetitive. In addition, pension plans to support 650,000 retirees and their dependents (compared with 80,000 active employees in N. America as of 2010) rose to 4.8% of GM’s annual expenses and $4,679 in annual pension payments per worker to former workers. Source: General Motors, FactSet, DataStream, History News Network. www.kpcb.com USA Inc. | Consequences of Inaction 432

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