In the doomsday scenario raising anxiety around the Motor City, General Motors Corp. makes a deal for Chrysler LLC, keeps Jeep and the minivans, and vaporizes the rest of the company.
Tens of thousands of Chrysler’s 66,409 employees lose their jobs as cash-desperate GM swiftly cuts redundant operations and sheds unprofitable models.
Factories and dealerships are closed, and the lights go out at Chrysler’s gleaming corporate headquarters campus in the northern suburb of Auburn Hills.
It’s not something Andre Thibodeaux wants to think about. The general manager of Lelli’s, an upscale steakhouse and Italian restaurant near Chrysler’s 15-story tower, gets about half his lunch business from the automaker and related businesses.
The eatery, with roots in downtown Detroit and family owned for three generations, already has lost business as Chrysler and parts suppliers have downsized and people eat out less due to economic worries. The loss of Chrysler’s corporate headquarters is almost unthinkable.
“I can’t imagine moving the building or changing or selling or anything like that,” said Thibodeaux. “Auburn Hills in general is built all around that building.”
Although it may be unimaginable, industry analysts say GM would have no choice but to slash costs if it acquires struggling Chrysler from its current owner, New York private equity firm Cerberus Capital Management LP.
Worry grows as GM-Chrysler talks drive forward
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