| GM's European dealers had their run-ins with the company lately, but wait until their read GM's annual report to the Security and Exchange Commission. In its 2012 10K, GM writes about its European dealer network:
Wait, there is less … Further to our story about the financial juggling acts performed to arrive at GM's $4.9 billion net profit, a few commenters asked how GM arrives at these conclusions. The 10-K has an answer: They make them up. Or rather, in accountant's speak:
And what's a "Level 3 input"? The Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) has the answer: "Level 3 inputs are unobservable inputs for the asset or liability." It's whatever management says. For folks who don't want to sift through GM's earnings release, and its "dizzying array of accounting gains and losses for tax credits" (CBC). Seeking Alpha did a little sifting of its own. The analysis comes to these conclusions:
Also of note: Past losses can be used to off-set your future tax liability, fair enough. After a bankruptcy, these tax losses are usually wiped put. They turn into assets and are given to the creditors. Just like a bankruptcy discharges debt, it also makes loss carry forwards disappear, also fair enough. The TARP shenanigans unfairly protected the carry forwards, creating what Elizabeth Warren, former chairwoman of the Congressional Oversight Panel called a "stealth bailout." Harvard professor Mark Ramseyer called it "an arcane and hard-to-follow way of disguising billions of dollars paid to firms that, for whatever reason, are politically favored." If GM can save $35 billion in taxes other companies would have to pay, then this is just another gift, taken from your pocket.
from The Truth About Cars http://www.thetruthaboutcars.com | |||
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