• Pension Management at General Motors

    Established in 1908, General Motors ("GM") is a leading global automobile manufacturer. Though the company has maintained its global presence since 1931 and offers a vast range of brands, it is now considered a fading automotive manufacturing leader. GM witnessed a financial crisis in 1992 and successfully attempted to resuscitate its sales and earnings by implementing a revival plan. The success lasted for a decade, but the company observed fierce competition and declining global market share during this period. The company has since reported another loss in 2006. Dwindling sales figures, increasing competition and hefty staff costs are considered to be the key hurdles to GM's success. Furthermore, the introduction of a new pension accounting standard, the Statement of Financial Accounting Standards ("SFAS") No. 158, is expected to further deteriorate the financial performance of GM by recommending full recognition of pension surplus or deficit on the company's balance sheets. The management of GM is focusing on strategies to effectively manage the risks and returns of the pension schemes so that the new pension accounting standard does not adversely affect GM's financial performance.
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  • Merrill Lynch's Asset Write-Down

    Since late 2003, Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc ("Merrill Lynch") had become the world's largest underwriter of collateralized debt obligations ("CDOs"). The assets of CDOs comprised some of the riskiest tranches of mortgage-backed securities mostly tied to subprime mortgages. With the collapse of the subprime mortgage market and declining liquidity in the summer of 2007, Merrill Lynch was caught with a substantial number of CDOs that had diminished sharply in value. Disillusioned with chief executive Stanley O'Neal's leadership, the management of Merrill Lynch called for a series of meetings to assess the firm's exposure to subprime-backed CDOs and redefine its risk-management strategy. To the management, an embarrassing write-down seemed inevitable for the third quarter of 2007, but how much of such assets should be written down and how quickly? What would be the implications for the firm in making such an announcement?
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