Skip to Content

Listen to the Joystiq Podcast (because your ears can't read)

GMAC's performance shows that we're not out of the woods yet

More
Text SizeAAA

Filed under: Banks

It's been an interesting year for GMAC, if interesting means humbling.

Back in May, the government conducted a series of stress tests and determined that 10 of the largest 19 banks needed to have more capital, if they were going to survive any more economic troubles that might come our way. Then, the 10 were given six months to raise a grand total of $74.6 billion in capital.

Well, here's the good news. Monday, the Federal Reserve announced $77 billion was raised.

But the bad news involves the bank hold company, GMAC Financial Services, the 14th largest bank and the lending device used by many Americans to pay for their cars -- those cars that are built by General Motors and Chrysler. GMAC, which is now 35% owned by the American government, has fallen short of raising its required $11.5 billion and will need what will be its third loan from the U.S. Treasury, which it will likely get through the TARP Automotive Industry Financial Program. That will mean American taxpayers will own even more of GMAC Financial Services.

GMAC is believed to need $5.6 billion in capital.

And we don't exactly own a company that's flourishing.

For instance, earlier this year, GMAC's commercial real estate lending company, GMAC Commercial, changed its name to Capmark Financial Group to distance itself from the tainted GMAC brand. It didn't work. Capmark filed for bankruptcy a few weeks ago.

GMAC also changed the name of its bank, GMAC Bank, to Ally Bank, hoping that customers would hear the friendly word Ally (which means friend) and dissociate that from GMAC. The company has made a big splash on TV with its commercials -- you know, the banker offers a toy pony to one girl, and a real one to another. When the little girl with the toy complains, the banker scolds her for not reading the fine print. Yeah, that's GMAC. Or was. And still is. Just not in name.

Er, anyway, while Ally Bank seems to be doing pretty well and is largely a bright spot for GMAC, not everything is rosy. When they began offering higher rates to the public, much higher than their competitors, critics, like the American Bankers Association, complained, saying that it was far too easy for Ally to be generous, thanks to the government loans they had received.

The Federal Reserve agreed and has since ordered Ally to lower bank-deposit rates and to reduce the amount of its car loans.

The Wall Street Journal (subscription required), recently half-joked that GMAC appeared to be cursed. The real problem, of course, isn't that it has a cloud of doom over it; it's that much of GMAC's lending model is around auto financing, and of course, the car industry, Cash for Clunkers aside, has been in pretty dire shape in the last year.

Commercial real estate has been struggling for some time, too -- or haven't you noticed the occasional shopping malls that, with their closed and shuttered stores, practically look like ghost towns -- so the bankruptcy wasn't a major surprise. Really, none of GMAC's problems are a shock to anyone following the Great Recession. You would expect a company so deeply invested in the more problematic parts of our economy to have trouble making a comeback.

But that's why if you want a dependable barometer on how the economy is doing, look to GMAC Financial Services. The day it can make a profit without American taxpayers propping it up is the day we may be able to truly put this recession behind us.

Geoff Williams is a regular at WalletPop, often writing about banking issues. He also is a frequent presence at AOL Small Business and is the co-author of the upcoming book, Living Well with Bad Credit.
Subscribe to Walletpop

Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)

Add your comments

Please keep your comments relevant to this blog entry. Email addresses are never displayed, but they are required to confirm your comments.

When you enter your name and email address, you'll be sent a link to confirm your comment, and a password. To leave another comment, just use that password.

To create a live link, simply type the URL (including http://) or email address and we will make it a live link for you. You can put up to 3 URLs in your comments. Line breaks and paragraphs are automatically converted — no need to use <p> or <br /> tags.

How Much Should I Save?

$
$
%
Vote Now For the Readers' Choice Best in Food Awards
Nominations have been received and vetted for the best-of-breed in gourmet grocers, online gourmet ...
Zingerman's Bakehouse: Artisan Bread and Pastry from Ann Arbor
Zingerman's Bakehouse of Ann Arbor, Michigan, is nominated for a Luxist Award in the best bread ...

Geoff Williams
Geoff Williams Filed under: Credit cards

Citigroup holds its customers hostage

Across the nation, Citibank credit card holders are receiving what pretty much amounts to a ransom note: We're going to raise your rates, says the letter, in so many words, but if you spend more ...
Bonnie McCarthy
Bonnie McCarthy Filed under: Budgets, Kids and Money, Saving Money, Technology

Family budgets: Make movie night safe again with family-friendly review sites

Around my house, we don't make the decision to pile into the car and head over to our local Cineplex as easily as we once did. It costs a lot of money these days to see talking animals, wild things ...
Madhusmita Bora
Madhusmita Bora Filed under: Transportation

Shop the friendly skies? The airlines are hoping you'll buy while in the sky

Along with sandwiches and soda, you may one day be able to buy tickets to Lion King and Animal Kingdom while cruising 35,000 feet above ground. A New York Times story reported that the airline ...
Francine Huff
Francine Huff Filed under: Career, Wealth, Recession

Single women are hit hard by the recession

There have been a lot of reports about which group of people have been hit hardest by the recession. Men have definitely been hit disproportionately hard by job losses. In fact, men held 71.9% of the ...

Banking Tools

Use these bank account calculators and tools to help you make the smartest bank account moves.

    Headlines from WalletPop Partners