- Posted November 14, 2013
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
Gov't sells $1.2B more GM stock
DETROIT (AP) -- The U.S. government sold another $1.2 billion worth of General Motors stock last month as it moves closer to selling its entire stake in the automaker. The government's stake as of Oct. 31 could be as low as 4 percent.
A report to Congress Tuesday said the government has recovered roughly $37.2 billion of the $49.5 billion it spent to save GM five years ago. That means taxpayers are still $12.3 billion in the hole.
The report didn't say how many shares were sold in October or how much stock the government still owns. As of Sept. 26, it owned 101 million shares or about 7 percent of the company.
GM stock traded from $33.92 to $37.99 in October. At the midpoint of that range, the government would have sold about 33.4 million shares for $35.96 each.
That would leave the government with roughly 70 million shares, or about 4 percent of GM. Those shares would have to sell for more than $175 per share for the government to break even. GM shares closed down 2 cents at $36.66.
The government got 912 million shares, or a 61 percent stake in GM, in exchange for the bailout. A Treasury Department watchdog says the government expects to lose at least $9.7 billion on the bailout.
Published: Thu, Nov 14, 2013
headlines Oakland County
- Distinguished servant: Chief judge makes his mark on Oakland County Circuit Court
- Vice president of asphalt paving company pleads guilty to bid rigging
- Law school’s Student Bar Association hosts Barristers’ Ball
- Whitmer signs bills to cut red tape, address criminal justice reform, and more
- The flood of ghost guns is slowing after regulation. It's also being challenged in the Supreme Court
headlines National
- Lawyers as Explainers: Remember, you are writing for intelligent people
- Lawyer accused of storing 1,000 pounds of marijuana at law office enters guilty plea
- MacArthur ‘genius grants’ fellows include law prof, domestic violence researcher
- About half of surveyed lawyers are satisfied with their law firm compensation, survey finds
- Judge allows malicious prosecution claim in attorney’s countersuit against McElroy Deutsch
- After Hurricane Helene, court deadlines extended, misconduct hotline activated