Citigroup and Wachovia May Compete for GMAC

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<h3>James A. Klotz</h3>

James A. Klotz

General Motors Acceptance Corp. is drawing interest from various suitors, including Citigroup Inc. and Wachovia Corp.

Citigroup Inc. and hedge fund Cerberus Capital Management are formulating a bid for a majority stake in GM’s financing giant, according to The Wall Street Journal, while Wachovia Corporation and Kohlberg Kravis and Roberts Co. are also planning a separate joint offer. Meantime, other private equity firms are considering joining one of the groups.

Citigroup is expected to bid approximately $11.5 billion, which would have to be in the form of cash, rather than debt. Increasing GMAC’s debt would have a negative effect on its credit rating, which would defeat the purpose of the sale.

With $28.4 billion in cash on its balance sheet, Citigroup would enhance its position in the auto-lending area by acquiring GMAC. Citigroup is already a substantial player in this market, with $46.6 billion in auto loans in 2005 along with another $6.4 billion in auto-loan organizations.

A majority share in GMAC would give Wachovia a much larger presence in mortgages and auto-finance as well as a cross-selling opportunity by acquiring access to a substantial network of households.

General Motors Chief Executive Officer Rick Wagoner had announced last October that the company was seeking a majority investor for its GMAC unit in order to obtain an investment grade rating and gain access to the debt markets, which many consider vital to GM’s survival.

James A. Klotz is the President of FMSbonds, Inc.
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Jan 31, 2006

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