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Eröffnet am: | 31.05.06 17:02 | von: sesam78 | Anzahl Beiträge: | 69 |
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DELPHI CORP. REGISTERED SHARES DL -,01 (918726) Kurs vom 31.05. | 16:37
1,26 EUR
+0,11 | +9,57%
§
Bid 1,24
3.000
§Ask 1,27
3.000
§US2471261055 | Aktie
Sonstige Kraftfahrzeugindustrie | USA
Details
Eröffnung 1,16
Höchstkurs 1,26
Tiefstkurs 1,14
Vortag 1,15
Umsatz (in Stück) 213.779
Umsatz (in EUR) 255.725,75
Preisfeststellungen 27
§
letzte Umsätze
16:37:47 5.250 1,26
16:33:17 13.000 1,26
16:31:08 10.000 1,26
16:30:52 5.000 1,26
16:30:40 44.355 1,25
16:29:38 1.000 1,23
16:27:50 5.750 1,20
Handelsplätze
Name Kurs Veränderung Datum Umsatz
NASDAQ Other OTC 1,60 +8,11% 16:44 31.05. 601.127
Frankfurt 1,26 +9,57% 16:37 31.05. 213.779
München 1,26 +8,62% 16:32 31.05. 2.310
Stuttgart 1,23 +6,96% 16:29 31.05. 22.600
Xetra 1,15 -4,96% 13:32 31.05. 2.004
Berlin-Bremen 1,18 +5,36% 09:13 31.05. 600
NYSE 0,48 +21,52% 21:59 14.10. 6.931.848
Performance
Zeitraum Veränderung Zeitraum Datum Kurs
1 Woche +22,34% 52W Hoch 19.08.2005 5,51
1 Monat +94,92% 52W Tief 11.10.2005 0,194
1 Jahr -67,88% Jahreshoch 29.05.2006 1,21
laufendes Jahr +363,71% Jahrestief 03.02.2006 0,241
Fundamentaldaten
2005 2006e 2007e
Gewinn pro Aktie -2,07 n.a. n.a.
KGV 0,00 n.a. n.a.
Dividendenrendite 0,0% 17,8% 17,8%
Marktkapitalisierung 158,65 Mio. EUR
Chart§
1 Tag
§
6 Monate
§
1 Jahr
*
§
Nachrichten
Anhörung zu Delphi nicht verschoben - GM-Antrag abgelehnt
24/05/2006 18:10 Dow Jones
UAW: Wenig Fortschritt bei Gesprächen mit Delphi - Radio
18/05/2006 09:42 Dow Jones
Ausblick: Die Märkte am Mittwoch
Moderation
Zeitpunkt: 30.10.07 15:34
Aktion: Forumswechsel
Kommentar: Falsches Forum
Zeitpunkt: 30.10.07 15:34
Aktion: Forumswechsel
Kommentar: Falsches Forum
Hat 2005 doch auch schon mal geklappt. Kauf am 12.10.05 zu 0,31 (natürlich viel zu früh, denn es ging noch auf 0,20 zurück) und verkauft am 10.05.06 zu 0,85 (natürlich auch zu früh, denn es ging noch auf 2,90 rauf)
Ich kann den jetzigen Kauf auch nicht begründen. Es ist für mich einfach nur ein ZOCK.
30.10.2007 17:19
Delphi bringt geplante über 3 Mrd USD für Gläubiger nicht auf
DJ Delphi bringt geplante über 3 Mrd USD für Gläubiger nicht auf
DETROIT (Dow Jones)--Die Delphi Corp, (Nachrichten) Troy, kann die anvisierten Barmittel von mehr als 3 Mrd USD zur Bedienung von Gläubigerforderungen nicht aufbringen. Wie der unter Gläubigerschutz nach Kapitel elf (Chapter 11) stehende Automobilzulieferer am Dienstag in einem gerichtlichen Schreiben mitteilte, muss das Unternehmen aufgrund der Kreditkrise ein weniger umfangreiches Finanzierungspaket zusammenstellen.
Betroffen sind Barzahlungen an unbesicherte Gläubiger und die General Motors Corp (GM). Delphi rechnet damit, das abgespeckte Finanzierungspaket schnüren zu können. Spätestens am 8. November soll der Antrag auf Genehmigung der Finanzierung im Rahmen des Insolvenzverfahrens eingereicht werden.
Ursprünglich hatte Delphi beabsichtigt, das Insolvenzverfahren bis zum Ende des Jahres abzuschließen und den Gläubigerschutz zu beenden. Nun peilt das Unternehmen das Ende des Verfahrens im ersten Quartal 2008 an. GM ist der frühere Mutterkonzern von Delphi und der größte Kunde.
Webseiten: http://www.gm.com
http://www.delphi.com
-Von Terry Kosdrosky, Dow Jones Newswires; + 49 (0)69 - 29 725 111
unternehmen.de@dowjones.com
DJG/DJN/flf/bam
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
October 30, 2007 11:14 ET (15:14 GMT)
Credit crunch hampers Delphi's recovery
The auto supplier is forced to cut more than $3B in payments to creditors including GM as part of an amended plan to exit bankruptcy.
October 30 2007: 1:53 PM EDT
DETROIT (Dow Jones/AP) -- Delphi Corp., the auto supplier trying to exit bankruptcy, said credit-market turmoil has forced it to seek a smaller financing package that cuts more than $3 billion in cash payments to its unsecured creditors and General Motors Corp.
According to court papers filed late Monday, Delphi's unsecured creditors will instead have the option to buy new Delphi stock at a discount through a rights offering. GM, Delphi's largest customer, will get a combination of cash, new debt and new convertible preferred stock.
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The scaled-back exit-financing would also squeeze Delphi's current shareholders. The shareholders will no longer be able to buy shares in the reorganized company at a discount, but they'll still have the option of purchasing up to 12.7 million shares of Delphi's new common stock at face value of $41.58 a share.
Delphi, formerly the auto-parts division of GM, originally sought to obtain about $8.7 billion in financing, including a $1.6 billion asset-based revolver, a $5.6 billion exit term loan and $1.5 billion unsecured notes. Now, the company is trying to ink a $6.8 billion deal that includes a $1.6 billion asset-based, first-lien revolver, a first-lien term loan of at least $3.7 billion and a senior secured second-lien loan of up to $1.5 billion.
In court papers, Delphi blamed its exit-financing troubles on a "severe dislocation in the capital markets." Delphi said it's in advanced discussions with "various" potential lenders and believes it will be successful in obtaining the financing.
Delphi Chief Restructuring Officer John Sheehan said the proposed changes to the Chapter 11 plan represent "further substantial progress" amid challenging economic conditions. The changes reflect an effective reduction of less than 5 percent in plan value, Sheehan said in a statement Tuesday.
Delphi, which is based in Troy, Mich., said it plans to present the exit-financing package to the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan by Nov. 8. GM and the committee representing Delphi's unsecured creditors support the changes, but Delphi said the committee representing shareholders said it won't support a new reorganization plan that cuts their recovery.
According to court papers, the terms of Delphi's pact with a group of investors led by hedge fund Appaloosa Management LP will also change, but the amount of the group's $2.55 billion investment will stay the same. The investors will receive more direct subscription shares and preferred shares, but the price for the shares will drop.
Delphi's unsecured creditors, who were slated to be repaid 80 percent on their claims with Delphi's new common stock and 20 percent in cash, will instead get a higher percentage of stock and the option to buy additional shares at the discounted price of $34.98.
Instead of a $2.7 billion cash payment, GM (Charts, Fortune 500) will receive $750 million in cash, a $750 million second-lien note and $1.2 billion in junior convertible preferred stock.
Delphi's current shareholders lose the option to purchase up to 40.8 million shares of common stock through the discount rights offering but can still buy as many as 12.7 million shares for $41.58 per share. They'll also get warrants to purchase up to $1 billion in new common stock at $45 per share, but won't get the direct payment of about 1.5 million shares pledged under the original reorganization plan.
Delphi (Charts, Fortune 500) originally sought to exit Chapter 11 by the end of this year, but has since said it expects to exit in the first quarter of 2008. The company filed for bankruptcy on Oct. 8, 2005.
Several companies looking to line up financing to exit bankruptcy have run into trouble in recent months. A credit crunch, spurred by a crisis in the subprime-mortgage industry, has caused many lenders to retool the pricing and terms of the financing they provide to companies leaving bankruptcy.
Chemical company Solutia Inc (Charts). earlier this month said it may have to spend more to obtain the $2 billion in exit financing it needs to emerge from Chapter 11 protection. Power company Calpine Corp (Charts)., which lined up its $8 billion exit loan before the credit crunch, has said it needs to exit bankruptcy by the end of January or it could lose the loan.
Is free-trade crushing U.S. manufacturers?
Delphi gets $3.4B, new CEO
ansonsten würde der kurs weiter nach oben schnellen
15:31 06.11.07
Troy (aktiencheck.de AG) - Der bankrotte US-Automobilzulieferer Delphi Corp. (ISIN US2471261055/ WKN 918726) gab am Dienstag bekannt, dass er seinen Verlust im dritten Quartal fast halbiert hat. Jedoch bewegt sich dieser aufgrund von Sonderbelastungen im Zusammenhang mit der Restrukturierung nach wie vor im Milliardenbereich.
Der Nettoverlust belief sich demnach auf 1,2 Mrd. Dollar bzw. 2,08 Dollar pro Aktie, nach einem Minus von 2,0 Mrd. Dollar bzw. 3,51 Dollar pro Aktie im Vorjahr. Der Umsatz erhöhte sich von 6,0 Mrd. Dollar auf 6,2 Mrd. Dollar.
Der Delphi-Konzern, der im Oktober 2005 Gläubigerschutz beantragen musste, hat vergangene Woche einen modifizierten Sanierungsplan eingereicht und kann den Gläubigerschutz aus heutiger Sicht voraussichtlich im ersten Quartal 2008 verlassen.
Die Aktie von Delphi schloss gestern an der OTC bei 0,25 Dollar.
(06.11.2007/ac/n/a)
06.11.2007 15:47
Delphi: Verlust im dritten Quartal fast halbiert
Troy (aktiencheck.de AG) - Der bankrotte US-Automobilzulieferer Delphi Corp. (ISIN US2471261055 (Nachrichten)/ WKN 918726) gab am Dienstag bekannt, dass er seinen Verlust im dritten Quartal fast halbiert hat. Jedoch bewegt sich dieser aufgrund von Sonderbelastungen im Zusammenhang mit der Restrukturierung nach wie vor im Milliardenbereich.
Der Nettoverlust belief sich demnach auf 1,2 Mrd. Dollar bzw. 2,08 Dollar pro Aktie, nach einem Minus von 2,0 Mrd. Dollar bzw. 3,51 Dollar pro Aktie im Vorjahr. Der Umsatz erhöhte sich von 6,0 Mrd. Dollar auf 6,2 Mrd. Dollar.
Der Delphi-Konzern, der im Oktober 2005 Gläubigerschutz beantragen musste, hat vergangene Woche einen modifizierten Sanierungsplan eingereicht und kann den Gläubigerschutz aus heutiger Sicht voraussichtlich im ersten Quartal 2008 verlassen.
Die Aktie von Delphi schloss gestern an der OTC bei 0,25 Dollar.
(06.11.2007/ac/n/a)
By The Associated Press
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DETROIT - Delphi Corp. said Tuesday that its third-quarter net loss narrowed due to smaller expenses related to its reorganization under bankruptcy protection, but it continued to struggle against the effect of auto industry production slackness in North America.
Troy-based Delphi, the former parts-making operation of General Motors Corp., lost $1.2 billion or $2.08 per share, compared with a loss of $2 billion or $3.51 per share in the third quarter of 2006.
The latest loss included an accrual of $369 million for interest expenses related to its bankruptcy reorganization plan, $124 million in charges for warranty matters and $112 million in costs including benefits for employees who have been let go.
It also included charges of $244 million for programs to train U.S. employees for new careers, down from $1 billion a year earlier.
In a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Delphi said production cuts at GM, Ford and Chrysler, rising commodity prices and high labour costs were to blame for its "poor financial performance."
But Delphi said union concessions approved this year will improve its competitiveness.
"We are beginning to see the benefits of decreased labour costs, primarily through lower costs of sales and the resultant improvement in gross margin," Delphi said.
"However, we still have future costs to incur to complete our transformation plan, divest of non-core operations and realign our cost structure."
Delphi reported revenue of $6.2 billion in the third quarter of 2007, up about three per cent from $6 billion in the same three months in 2006.
GM remains Delphi's biggest customer, and the supplier said its future remains tied to GM. Non-GM revenue was $3.6 billion, 58 per cent of the total, up from $3.4 billion in the third quarter of 2006.
"Delphi is facing considerable challenges due to revenue decreases and related pricing pressures stemming from a substantial reduction in GM's North American vehicle production in recent years," Delphi said in the filing.
Delphi, spun off by GM in 1999, filed for bankruptcy in 2005. It plans to emerge from bankruptcy early next year.
Its reorganization program includes closing or selling 21 of its 29 U.S. plants as it shrinks to eight factories making electronics, safety systems, heating and air conditioning systems and some mechanical parts.