Close X
Thursday, December 12, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadian Government Sells Its $3.3 Billion Stake In General Motors

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Apr, 2015 12:01 PM
    OTTAWA — The Harper government unloaded its multibillion-dollar stake in General Motors on Monday, tapping into a stockpile of cash that could help it overcome the oil slump and fulfil its key promise to balance the election-year budget.
     
    The government sold nearly 73.4 million shares in an unregistered block trade to Goldman, Sachs & Co., the Finance Department said late Monday.
     
    Taxpayers' stake in the automaker was worth more than $3.3 billion Monday, based on a US$36.66 price at the close and an exchange rate of $1.2473. But it's unclear exactly how much the sale will benefit Ottawa's bottom line.
     
    Ottawa needed to make $4 billion in proceeds from its remaining shares to break even on its original 2009 investment, which was part of the effort to bail out the then-sputtering automaker.
     
    The sell-off comes as the Conservative government searches for ways to live up to its crucial promise to balance its books in 2015-16, a long-running pledge that appeared at risk of remaining unfulfilled amid the negative economic impacts of the global oil slump.
     
    Even though lower crude prices are expected to indirectly carve billions of dollars out of federal coffers, the government has repeatedly insisted it will eliminate the deficit in the April 21 budget.
     
    Following through on the pledge will be central to Tory re-election fortunes in the October vote.
     
    The sale also comes only a few days after the start of the 2015-16 fiscal year, which means proceeds will boost the budget's bottom line.
     
    The unexpected oil-price plunge forced Finance Minister Joe Oliver to take the rare step of delaying the budget, which is usually delivered in February. Oliver has said his department needed more time to assess the market instability created by the oil shock.
     
    Did the federal government postpone the budget by a couple of months in order to sell the GM shares during the 2015-16 fiscal year?
     
    "I think the timing would suggest that that's definitely a possibility," TD Bank senior economist Randall Bartlett said Monday.
     
    "But whether or not they made that decision to delay the budget in order to do that is a question I think you'd have to ask Minister Oliver."
     
    Bartlett said many analysts had speculated the government would sell its GM shares soon.
     
    The sale will help Ottawa achieve its balanced-budget goal, he added.
     
    "This is going to take a large chunk out of the deficit," Bartlett said.
     
    Last fall, the government predicted a $1.6-billion surplus for 2015-16, but crude prices fell even further in the months that followed. 
     
    Oliver has even acknowledged achieving balance may mean dipping into Ottawa's $3-billion contingency reserve, which was set aside for unforeseen circumstances.
     
    He made no mention of the government's quest to balance the books in a statement Monday to announce the deal.
     
    Oliver said the sale means GM has returned to private-sector ownership and taxpayers are no longer exposed to the market. Ottawa had long reiterated its intention to eventually unload the shares.
     
    "Our investment in GM was always meant to be temporary," Oliver said. 
     
    "We never believed the Government should be a shareholder of a private sector company for an indefinite period of time." 
     
    The government news release said more details about the sale will be made available in the coming days.
     
    Canada was the only North American government still holding stock in GM. The province of Ontario sold its remaining GM holdings in February, while the U.S. government sold the last of its stake in December 2013.
     
    Some have urged the government to hang onto the automaker's stock, including the union that represents 7,000 GM workers in Ontario
     
    Unifor economist Jim Stanford has said the value of the shares could continue to rise. He's also said that by keeping the stock, the government would be ensured a seat at the company's table.
     
    The Finance Department has said the government initially booked the value of the GM stock at about $1.1 billion. The net gain or loss from a sale would be the total proceeds minus the book value, a department spokesman said.
     
    That would provide a net gain of $2.2 billion if the shares were sold at the current market valuation of about $3.3 billion.
     
    A sale of $3.3 billion would also leave the government only $700 million short of breaking even on the original investment.
     
    Through repaid loans and earlier sales of GM shares, Ottawa has already recouped about $3.2 billion of its initial $7.2-billion contribution to the auto bailout, the Finance Department said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Bacteria In Bud Prompts B.C. Medical Marijuana Firm To Recall Product

    Bacteria In Bud Prompts B.C. Medical Marijuana Firm To Recall Product
    OTTAWA — Hundreds of medical marijuana users in British Columbia have been told the pot they thought could help them might harm them because it's contaminated with bacteria.

    Bacteria In Bud Prompts B.C. Medical Marijuana Firm To Recall Product

    DC, Chinese Bank Working Together To Promote Use Of Renminbi In Trade Deals

    DC, Chinese Bank Working Together To Promote Use Of Renminbi In Trade Deals
    TORONTO — North America's first trading hub for China's currency, the renminbi, will strengthen the trade relationship between Canada and the Asian economic powerhouse, federal Finance Minister Joe Oliver said Monday.

    DC, Chinese Bank Working Together To Promote Use Of Renminbi In Trade Deals

    Just The Facts: Veteran Lawyer Joe Friday Tabbed As New Integrity Commissioner

    Just The Facts: Veteran Lawyer Joe Friday Tabbed As New Integrity Commissioner
    OTTAWA — Prime Minister Stephen Harper has nominated Joe Friday, a lawyer and long-time public servant, to be Canada's next public sector integrity commissioner.

    Just The Facts: Veteran Lawyer Joe Friday Tabbed As New Integrity Commissioner

    Defensive Back Ryan Phillips Agrees To Extension With Lions, Paul McCallum To Return

    Defensive Back Ryan Phillips Agrees To Extension With Lions, Paul McCallum To Return
    VANCOUVER — Veteran defensive back Ryan Phillips agreed to a contract extension with the B.C. Lions on Monday. The new deal will keep Phillips, who has spent his entire 11-year CFL career in B.C., with the Lions through the 2016 season.

    Defensive Back Ryan Phillips Agrees To Extension With Lions, Paul McCallum To Return

    Woman Protesting Bill C-51 Expelled From The Commons For Exposing Her Breasts

    Woman Protesting Bill C-51 Expelled From The Commons For Exposing Her Breasts
    OTTAWA — A woman was expelled from the House of Commons today after exposing her breasts. The group FEMEN Quebec claimed responsibility a few minutes later on social media, saying the act was meant to highlight its opposition to the government's Bill C-51.

    Woman Protesting Bill C-51 Expelled From The Commons For Exposing Her Breasts

    Bodies Of Two Alberta Men Killed In Avalanche Near Prince George Recovered By Helicopter

    Bodies Of Two Alberta Men Killed In Avalanche  Near Prince George Recovered By Helicopter
    MCBRIDE, B.C. — The bodies of two men from Alberta killed in an avalanche near Prince George, B.C., on Saturday have been recovered.

    Bodies Of Two Alberta Men Killed In Avalanche Near Prince George Recovered By Helicopter