Looks like I finally have the answer to the original question
GM, in a regulatory filing today, said the global economic and credit turmoil requires the company to find ``additional near-term liquidity support.''
``Based on our estimated cash requirements through December 31, 2009, we do not expect our operations to generate sufficient cash flow to fund our obligations as they come due, and we do not currently have other traditional sources of liquidity available to fund these obligations,'' GM said.
``We believe any government assistance would likely significantly dilute GM's equity,'' said Chicago-based Barclays analyst Brian Johnson, who reduced GM to ``underweight'' from ``equal weight'' and lowered his price target from $4.
``GM's only salvation is a capital injection from the government,'' said Buckingham analyst Joseph Amaturo in a note today, cutting the automaker's share-price target to $1 from $3. ``The company liquidity position is dwindling rapidly given the automotive cash burn,'' said the New York-based analyst, who rates GM shares ``underperform.''
Nov. 10 (Bloomberg) -- General Motors Corp. plummeted as much as 31 percent and moved toward its lowest level in 62 years after a Deutsche Bank AG analyst downgraded the shares, saying they may be worthless in a year.
``Even if GM succeeds in averting a bankruptcy, we believe that the company's future path is likely to be bankruptcy-like,'' Deutsche Bank's Rod Lache wrote today in a note. The New York analyst recommended selling the shares and cut his 12-month price target to zero. He previously advised holding the stock.