Chryslerâs valuation needs to hit $18 billion to justify an initial public offering. Thatâs the point where the union trust fund that owns 41.5 percent of the automaker would reap more than it could get from controlling shareholder Fiat. But itâs also way more than either owner has ever considered to be a reasonable price.
The two have been at loggerheads over price for more than a year, ever since Fiatâs offer for an additional 3.3 percent stake valued the company at $4.2 billion - $6 billion when higher offers for two more 3.3 percent slugs are included. The trust fund pegged the value at $10.3 billion.
The gap spawned a still-unresolved lawsuit and a later attempt by Fiat and Chryslerâs chief executive, Sergio Marchionne, to strike a deal for the trust fundâs entire stake. A 2009 agreement divvying the company up after its bankruptcy set the maximum amount the Italian automaker would pay at $4.25 billion, plus compound interest of 9 percent starting in 2010.
The tally, including interest, now stands at $6 billion, effectively valuing Chrysler at $14.5 billion. The cost to Fiat would be $750 million less, though, as it could keep the unionâs share of undistributed dividends, according to Bernstein research. Mr. Marchionne says he wonât pay that much, quipping last month the union should âbuy a lottery ticketâ instead.
He may be bluffing. But the problem for the trust fund, assuming itâs set on getting $6 billion for its holdings, is that going ahead with an I.P.O. makes its task harder. Thatâs because the three slugs accounting for the 9.9 percent the two are already haggling over remain subject to a court battle going Fiatâs way.
Stripping out those slugs means the fund still needs to get $5.4 billion for 31.5 percent of the company. That requires a $17.2 billion company valuation, on top of which the fund would have to give up as much as $900 million in dividends over the next two years due to its lower holdings.
Itâs not impossible. Mr. Marchionne reckons Chryslerâs pre-tax margin could hit 8 percent in 2015, close to what General Motors makes now. That could mean a $4 billion profit, assuming revenue increases 5 percent. Pop that on a multiple of five times earnings, a discount to where G.M. currently trades, and the union may be in luck.
Itâs a gamble, though, and not just because of earnings. The 2009 agreement also implies Fiat might be able to claw back anything the union gets for its shares above the maximum amount - though the I.P.O. might nullify that, according to Bernstein.
That means the stock offering could end up being a lot of work for nothing. The negotiating table may be more palatable.
Antony Currie is an associate editor at Reuters Breakingviews. For more independent commentary and analysis, visit breakingviews.com.