Coast Die Casting sold their business operations to Kinetic Die Casting Company on June 3rd, 2009. In the last few weeks, Kinetic Die Casting Company has supplied parts to many of the former Coast Die Casting Company customers. All of …
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Harper Says Canada’s Automotive Plans Will Track U.S.A.
Harper Says Canada’s Automotive Plans Will Track U.S.A.
March 29 (Bloomberg) — Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper said his government’s plans to help General Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC will track similar efforts by President Barack Obama’s administration.
“Our plans will obviously be very close in nature,” Harper said in an interview today in Washington.
Obama’s auto task force, after assessing proposals from GM and Chrysler, will announce tomorrow whether the government will give the automakers more U.S. assistance. The companies have received $17.4 billion since December and asked for an additional $21.6 billion in aid last month.
Canada’s Finance Minister Jim Flaherty and Industry Minister Tony Clement have scheduled a press conference tomorrow at 12 p.m. Ottawa time to discuss “restructuring” in the auto industry.
Harper said Canadian officials are in close consultation with the U.S. on the automotive industry, though he declined to comment on the specifics of the discussions or the U.S. plan.
“I’m very confident the United States government has its sights firmly on the objective of a restructuring where the tough decisions are made such that the restructuring will be successful,” he said. “They do understand that if one were to pursue a restructuring without making the stakeholders make all the tough decisions, then the restructuring could well fail.”
Chrysler, seeking $2.3 billion in aid from the Canadian government, has been unable to reach an agreement with the country’s auto union to reduce costs ahead of a March 31 deadline, Ken Lewenza, president of the Canadian Auto Workers, said on March 27 on a call with reporters.
Chrysler builds minivans in Windsor, Ontario, and the Chrysler 300, Dodge Charger and Challenger cars in Brampton, Ontario. The company has a metal casting plant in Toronto.
Reviving the U.S. auto industry will require a “set of sacrifices from all parties involved, management, labor, shareholders, creditors, suppliers, dealers,” Obama said in an interview on CBS’s “Face the Nation” taped March 27. “Everybody’s going to have to come to the table and say it’s important for us — to take serious restructuring steps now in order to preserve a brighter future down the road.”
To contact the reporter on this story: Theophilos Argitis in Washington at targitis@bloomberg.net; Andrew J. Barden in Washington at barden@bloomberg.net; Theophilos Argitis in Washington at targitis@bloomberg.net.
Tier 1 Auto Suppliers Bought by Revstone LLC, Ford, BMW, Delphi Object
Quote, originally posted by Detroit News »
Washington — The Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation said Tuesday it will assume responsibility for a bankrupt Michigan auto supplier’s underfunded pension plan.
The government’s pension insurer will take over Portage-based Contech US LLC’s pension plan covering 532 workers and retirees effective immediately, the agency said in a statement.
According to PBGC estimates, the Contech US LLC Pension Plan is 38 percent funded, with assets of $8.4 million to cover benefit liabilities of $22 million. The agency expects to cover $12 million of the $13.6 million shortfall.
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Contech LLC sought bankruptcy protection in January in Detroit after it had been acquired in 2007 by investment firm Marathon Asset Management LLC. It has nine U.S. plants, with its Walled Lake plant responsible for much of its revenue.
“This action is an integral part of our ongoing efforts to restructure Contech and meet the challenges of the automotive industry going forward. We continue to work closely with our lenders and customers to reach a consensus on the remaining changes that are necessary,” said Morris Rowlett, chairman & CEO of Contech in a statement in January when the company sought bankruptcy protection.
The PBGC will take over the assets and use insurance funds to pay guaranteed benefits earned under the plan, which ends Tuesday.
Retirees and beneficiaries will continue to receive monthly benefit checks without interruption, and future participants will receive their pensions when they are eligible to retire, the PBGC said.
Within the next several weeks, the PBGC will send notification letters to all participants in the Contech plan detailing the change.
Privately held Contech was founded in 1950 and builds light metal die casting and machining for automobile and parts manufacturers.
The company was sold from former owner SPX Corp. to Marathon Asset Management, a private equity firm, in 2007. Contech’s U.K. subsidiary based in Wales is not in bankruptcy.
Contech has six casting facilities in Michigan, Indiana and Tennessee, and had sales of $312 million in 2007, but saw sales fall to $223 million in 2008 as auto sales plummeted.
Marathon has sought to use Section 363 of the bankruptcy code to sell nearly all of Contech’s casting assets to Revstone Industries LLC.
Revstone would pay $14 million and assume certain liabilities from its casting facilities under the proposed sale.
Last week, several major customers of Contech filed an objection to the sale.
Ford Motor Co., Automotive Components Holdings LLC, BMW AG and Delphi filed a joint objection to the sale. Ford and Delphi both have said they won’t accept Revstone as a replacement supplier.
Kinetic Die Casting manufactures custom metal parts to their customer. If you would like more information about Kinetic Die Casting, please visit our website:Kinetic Die Casting Company
Aluminum Auto Parts – What Every Car Needs
Aluminum Auto Parts – What Every Car Needs. Hundreds and thousand of aluminum auto parts are being produced by different die casters everyday. Aside from the design’s lightweight element, most aluminum auto parts are also being carefully constructed as net shape to avoid wastes and hiring additional services to run machineries. A lot of top automobile companies and sellers rely on die caster to provide them with quality auto parts made from aluminum alloy. Mounting holes are also inclusive in the production stage of these aluminum auto components, thereby making them cheaper in retail and wholesale prices compared to auto parts made of steel. This is also why a lot of leading manufacturers of cars and other automobiles have taken it to themselves to have their own manufacturing plants to cater to their entire aluminum auto parts needs.
The industry of auto manufacturing greatly relies on the availability of car parts made from aluminum. Since its invention in the early years, a lot of manufacturers have found it easier to produce high quality automobiles without having to spend a lot in customizing engine parts and other essential parts of auto gears. In the past few years, a large percentage of the automobiles constructed by leading manufacturers have delicate parts made from the simplified processes of aluminum die casting. Aluminum contains a type of metallic alloy that has elements that contribute to the products’ overall function and strength. Aside from this assured durability, aluminum also resists corrosion, thereby making it easier for a car or any automobile to last for a long period of time.
Kinetic Die Casting manufactures custom metal parts to their customer. If you would like more information about Kinetic Die Casting, please visit our website:Kinetic Die Casting Company
Aluminum Auto Parts maker J.L. French files for bankruptcy
By JEWEL GOPWANI • FREE PRESS BUSINESS WRITER • July 13, 2009
In another example of how the auto industry’s sales drop-off has financially crippled auto suppliers, J.L. French Automotive Castings Inc., a maker of aluminum parts, filed for bankruptcy protection early today. It is the company’s second bankruptcy filing in three years.
Overburdened by debt, Wisconsin-based J.L. French, which counts on General Motors Co., Ford Motor Co., the Chrysler Group and Magna International Inc. for most of its sales, said it already has negotiated a plan to cut its secured debt by 75% that includes another trip through Chapter 11.
High levels of debt could push at least two other major suppliers into Chapter 11 in the next few weeks.
Bankruptcy fears sent shares of Detroit-based American Axle & Manufacturing Inc. down 27 cents or 15% on Monday to close at $1.52.
Last week the company said it won a waiver on the terms of its loan agreement through the end of the month.
Shelly Lombard, an analyst at Gimme Credit, which rates corporate bonds, said in a note to investors that it will be difficult for American Axle to avoid bankruptcy.
American Axle spokesman Chris Son said today that the supplier continues to work with law firm Shearman & Sterling, but declined to say if the company is preparing a bankruptcy filing.
Meanwhile, Novi-based Cooper Standard faces a deadline of Wednesday to cut its debt after it put off making an interest payment last month.
The supplier’s discussions with lenders continue, said Cooper-Standard spokeswoman Sharon Wenzle.
J.L. French, which makes such aluminum parts as engine blocks, oil pans and transmission cases, said plummeting revenue made it impossible for the company to keep up with its debt payments.
In a court filing, J.L. French CEO Thomas Musgrave said in recent years that the company “invested significant amounts of capital to expand” its “die-casting and machining capacity in support of specific customer production contracts that in many cases failed to generate the expected level of sales volume.”
With the company in financial stress from being over-leveraged, it has had a tough time convincing customers to award it new business.
Contact JEWEL GOPWANI : 313-223-4550 or jgopwani@freepress.com
Kinetic Die Casting can manufacture aluminum automobile parts, heat sinks, aerospace parts and much more. If you are looking for aluminum or zinc parts, visit our website Kinetic Die Casting Company
U.S. Military Defense Procurement
CHICAGO (Dow Jones)–The surprise selection this week of Oshkosh Corp. (OSK) to build a high-priority truck for the U.S. military highlights a sea-change in defense procurement.
The maker of iconic fire trucks is the latest example of the Pentagon’s increasing preference for contractors with can-do capability over defense industry giants geared for lengthy peacetime procurements.
The extended conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan have created demand for specialist equipment and services that previously attracted little interest from Pentagon planners or traditional defense contractors.
“There’s been such an immediate demand for new equipment, it’s outstripped the ability of the normal contractors to deliver it on time,” said Dean Lockwood, an analyst for Forecast International Inc., a defense consulting firm in Connecticut. The Pentagon has “completely thrown out the normal procurement process.”
Navistar International Corp. (NAV), the commercial truck and engine maker, and diversified manufacturer ITT Corp. (ITT) are among a band of companies that have won large contracts for military hardware to counter specific threats to U.S. troops.
The prospect for further military sales has bolstered Navistar and ITT’s stock prices in recent months. Navistar has surged 169% off its 52-week low in November, but early Thursday was trading down 4.53% at $40.59 a share after failing to win Tuesday’s contract. ITT, meanwhile, is up 35% off its March low. The stock was recently trading down 4.01% at $43.28.
Oshkosh won out over rivals bids from consortia including BAE Systems PLC and General Dynamics Inc. (GD) for the $1.06 billion contract to build 2,244 armored all-terrain trucks for U.S. troops Afghanistan.
Oshkosh already makes large and medium-size cargo trucks for the military, but had little previous experience with a high-priority program like the patrol trucks, which are expected to help U.S. soldiers pursue Taliban insurgents in Afghanistan’s rugged, mountainous landscape.
“We took a measured risk,” said Oshkosh CEO Robert Bohn in an interview. “This will help us get through the worst recession we’ve seen in our lifetime.”
He credited the win to an all-out effort by the company’s engineering staff and Oshkosh’s ability to leverage its existing truck components and its production capacity.
Oshkosh, whose brands include Pierce fire trucks and JLG self-propelled work platforms, has struggled in recent quarters because of falling demand for construction-related equipment. Oshkosh’s sales for the fiscal first half ended March 31 fell 18% to $2.68 billion. The company reported a $1.21 billion loss amid large charge-offs, compared with income of $109.9 million, or 1.47 a share, in the same period a year earlier. About 17% of the company’s work force has been laid off since last year.
In 2008, defense sales were Oshkosh second largest business unit, accounting for 27% of its $7.13 billion in net sales.
The company’s stock has more than doubled since the beginning of the year, including a 27% increase on Wednesday. Oshkosh was recently up 2.17% at $18.83 amid a marketwide selloff.
Navistar stunned the defense industry two years ago by raking in billions of dollars worth of contracts for mine-resistant, ambush-protected trucks, or MRAP. The company impressed military planners with its use of a readily available commercial truck chassis and engines for a heavily armored truck that could survive roadside bomb blasts in Iraq. Like Oshkosh, Navistar was able to deploy its own assembly lines to expedite production of the vehicles. Warrenville, Ill.-based Navistar built more than one-third of the 16,000 MRAPs purchased by the military.
Standard & Poor’s Ratings Services put Navistar and its customer financing arm on watch for a ratings downgrade Thursday as the outlook for North American commercial truck demand remains bleak for this year and next. S&P said Navistar’s inability to win Tuesday’s contract for the new military truck eliminated a potential revenue offset for lower sales of commercial trucks.
The MRAP and the smaller, more mobile variant of the MRAP being built by Oshkosh were developed and tested in six months. Observers note that many traditional defense contractors are at a disadvantage in such accelerated procurements because they typically rely on outside contractors for components and production work outside of their core specialties, such as building aircraft or ships.
Meanwhile, ITT’s defense electronics business has been growing at a 28%-a-year pace since the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003. In 2008, ITT’s $6.3 billion in military sales accounted 54% of the company’s total annual revenue, up from $1.7 billion or 32% of revenue in 2003.
ITT’s other businesses, which include pumps for water treatment plants and automotive components, have struggled in recent years amid lower end-market demand and a downturn in the economy.
The White Plains, N.Y., company, which makes a variety of radio equipment and night-vision goggles, is the U.S. military’s leading supplier of electronic jammers to disrupt the radio signals used to detonate improvised explosive devices (IED) that target trucks carrying U.S. troops.
ITT has built some 40,000 truck-mounted jammers. Prior to the wars, such jammers were primarily used on aircraft, rather than trucks.
“The Department of Defense did not view IEDs as a weapon that could or would be used effectively by our enemies,” said Bob Pergler, director of business development for ITT’s electronic systems.
Kinetic Die Casting manufactures aluminum and zinc die casting parts. Samples of KDC’s work include die cast speaker parts, aluminum tile plates, and other die cast metal parts. If you would like to have a quote please visit our website: Kinetic Die Casting Company