Filed under:
Government/Legal,
GM,
Earnings/Financials
The Detroit News reports that the
US Treasury sold off around 17.2 million shares of
General Motors stock in February worth $489 million. The move is part of a plan to rid the government of
GM stock by March, 2014. All told, the government has regained $29.8 billion of the $49.5 billion it took to bail out GM in 2008 and 2009. The feds sold off nearly half the country's stake in the automaker when the company went public in 2010, and now taxpayers own around 19 percent of the manufacturer. Moving forward, the Treasury will disclose how many shares it has sold each financial quarter.
Earlier this year, the government named Citigroup Inc. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. to manage the sale of GM stock. The duo will receive around $3 million for handling the sale, though the government has opted to keep its trading plan under wraps to keep hedge funds from taking advantage of the situation. The plan does place limits on exactly how much stock can be sold at any given time, however. Six smaller brokerages will handle the sale of the Treasury's GM common stock.
Treasury sold off $489M of GM stock in February originally appeared on
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