So reports The New York Times:
DETROIT — The Treasury Department is preparing a Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing for Chrysler that could come as soon as next week, people with direct knowledge of the action said Thursday.
The Treasury has an agreement in principle with the United Automobile Workers union, whose members’ pensions and retiree health care benefits would be protected as a condition of the bankruptcy filing, said these people, who asked for anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the case.
Moreover, Fiat of Italy would complete its alliance with Chrysler while the company is under bankruptcy protection.
The only major question that remains unresolved is what happens to Chrysler’s lenders, who hold $6.9 billion in company debt. The government’s most recent offer, presented Wednesday, would give the company’s lenders about 22 cents on the dollar, or $1.5 billion, and a 5 percent equity stake in a reorganized Chrysler. Earlier this week, a steering committee of the lenders proposed that they receive 65 cents on the dollar, or $4.5 billion, and a 40 percent equity stake.
If no agreement is reached, a nasty legal fight could emerge in bankruptcy. The creditors’ claims are backed by virtually all of the company’s collateral, including plants, brands and equipment, and the lenders will argue that they have first claim on those assets.
(…)
A bankruptcy filing by Chrysler would be the first among Detroit’s troubled automakers, who have been mired in a devastating sales slump since last fall. Treasury is also working with General Motors to prepare a possible bankruptcy case, and the terms of a Chrysler filing might offer a glimpse into the shape of G.M.’s own filing.
The deadline that Obama set for Chrysler expires next Thursday, so expect some action on this front before then.

April 30th, 2009 at 4:50 pm
I think you are right about a nasty legal fight in bankruptcy; however, the lenders are playing chicken. If Chrysler were forced into liquidation, most of the lenders get bumpkus. They are threatening a demand for liquidation hoping the government will lose its nerve and cough up more money. I hope Obama calls the bluff.