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Yield Hog Alert: Buy GM Bonds |
November 11, 2008 By Jamie Dlugosch, Contributing Editor, InvestorPlace |


Jamie Dlugosch
Jamie is the editor of Penny Stock Winners. He has over 20 years of experience in financial markets including investment banking, equity analysis and research and money management. In addition to being the Editor of Penny Stock Winners, he is also a Contributing Editor of InvestorPlace.com and founder and editor of The Rational Investor.
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Currently the company employs around 140,000 people in its United State operations. (See also: "Can GM Pull a U-Turn?")
With the U.S. economy in a major decline and headed into what many expect to be a prolonged recession, the administration and Congress are unlikely to stand by as America's behemoth closes its doors.
Even a Chapter 11 filing would have consequences that are unacceptable to our political leaders. Reluctant suppliers would exact onerous terms for delivery of their products, competitors would seize on the weakness of GM to increase market share and valued employees would be easy prey for those same competitors.
Is there an investment opportunity lurking in the wings of disaster at GM?
Forget about the equity in GM as shareholder value is expected to go to zero. Instead, check out the returns of GM bonds.
Currently priced to yield nearly 50%, the GM bond maturing in July of 2013 is generating a return likely to be attractive to the investors with an appetite for substantial risk in part of their portfolios. And with the high probability of an intervention by the U.S. Treasury under the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP), that risk may be substantially mitigated.
The application of TARP resources to GM and others in the auto industry was made even more likely with the election of Barack Obama to the oval office. The risk/reward here appears to be weighted in favor of the investor.
This article was written by Jamie Dlugosch, contributor to InvestorPlace.com. For more actionable insight like this, go to: www.InvestorPlace.com. James F. Dlugosch contributed to this article. Jim has over 40 years experience in the credit markets including serving as Director of the Minnesota Housing Finance Agency in the 1970s. He also led the fixed income group of a large regional brokerage firm before owning his own firm that specialized in underwriting and trading fixed income securities. He is a contributor to The Rational Investor, but most importantly, he is my father.


