Visteon 6500
|
|
Bookmark Visteon 6500 |
Here you can find all about Visteon 6500 like cd and other informations. For example: .
Visteon 6500 manual (user guide) is ready to download for free.
On the bottom of page users can write a review. If you own a Visteon 6500 please write about it to help other people. [ Report abuse or wrong photo | Share your Visteon 6500 photo ]
Manual
Preview of first few manual pages (at low quality). Check before download. Click to enlarge.
Download
(English)Visteon 6500, size: 316 KB |
Visteon 6500
User reviews and opinions
No opinions have been provided. Be the first and add a new opinion/review.
Documents

VISTEON CORPORATION SPIN-OFF NOTIFICATION OF NEW CANADIAN TAX TREATMENT On June 28, 2000, (the "Distribution Date"), Ford Motor Company ("Ford") distributed all of the common shares of Visteon Corporation ("Visteon") owned by Ford to Ford Common and Class B shareholders of record as of the close of business on June 12, 2000 (the "Record Date"). Unless you sold your right to receive Visteon shares before the distribution date, you received 0.130933 shares of Visteon for each Ford share you owned as of the Record Date. We are pleased to advise that on June 14, 2001 the Canadian Income Tax Act was amended so that foreign spinoff dividends can now be received by Canadian shareholders on a tax-free basis at the election of shareholder. Ford has received confirmation from the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency that the receipt of Visteon shares will be tax-free for Canadian income tax purposes, provided that the Ford shareholder files (i.e. mails through the Canadian postal system) an election in writing on or before September 11, 2001. If you make the election, you may be entitled to a refund of Canadian income taxes previously paid in respect of the Visteon spin-off. If you elect tax-free treatment, you are required to allocate the adjusted cost base ("ACB") of your Ford shares as of June 28, 2000, immediately prior to the distribution, between your Ford shares and your Visteon shares received based on their relative fair market values on June 28, 2000. Based upon the average high and low composite prices of Ford and Visteon on the New York Stock Exchange on June 28, 2000, 96.07% of your ACB in your Ford shares should be allocated to your Ford shares, and the remaining 3.93% should be allocated to your Visteon shares (including any fractional share interest). If you received cash in lieu of fractional shares, you will be treated as having sold the fraction for the amount of cash received and you would report the capital gain or loss on that sale equal to the difference between your ACB in the fractional share of Visteon (determined using the above methodology) and the amount of cash received. You should note that if you participated in Ford's spin-off of Associates First Capital Corporation on April 7, 1998 and plan to elect tax-free treatment in respect of the Associates spin-off, you should first take into account the ACB adjustment arising from the Associates spin-off prior to determining the ACB of your Ford shares immediately before the Visteon spin-off. An example of the ACB allocation is shown on the reverse side of this notification. In addition, if you decide to make the election and on or after June 28, 2000 you have sold any or all of your Ford shares or Visteon shares, your previously reported capital gains in respect of those transactions will increase (or capital losses will decrease) based on the requirement to allocate a portion of the ACB of your Ford shares to your Visteon shares. If you sold your Ford shares after the Record Date but before the Distribution Date, you should contact your tax advisor to determine how to allocate the ACB of your Ford shares. You should consult your tax advisor regarding the decision to make the election and the application of this new tax law to your particular circumstances. ACTION REQUIRED TO ELECT TAX-FREE TREATMENT If you wish to elect tax-free treatment, you must file (i.e. mail through the Canadian postal system) an election in writing on or before September 11, 2001. In order to assist you, we have attached a suggested election letter to be completed by you and sent to your District Taxation Office. The address is indicated on the notice of assessment you receive each year from the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency. You should retain this information to support the determination of your ACB in your Ford and Visteon shares.
EXAMPLE OF VISTEON CALCULATIONS (all amounts in Canadian $ unless otherwise indicated)
IMPACT IN 2000 Assume you owned 100 shares of Ford stock with a total adjusted cost base ("ACB") of $4,000 (i.e., $40 per share). You received 13.0933 shares of Visteon stock as a result of the spin-off distribution. The Visteon shares received had a fair market value of $253 (13.0933 Visteon shares received times US$13.09 per Visteon share times the Canadian exchange rate on June 28, 2000 of 1.4786).
As a result of the election, your 2000 income for tax purposes will decrease by the previously reported foreign income of $253 (the fair market value of the Visteon shares received on June 28, 2000).
The ACB of your Ford shares would be reduced to $3,842.80 (96.07% of $4,000) or $38.43 per share ($3,842.80 divided by 100 shares) The ACB of your Visteon shares would be $157.20 (3.93% of $4,000) or $12.01 per share ($157.20 divided by 13.0933 Visteon shares).
IMPACT WHERE SALE OF FORD OR VISTEON SHARES AFTER JUNE 28, 2000 Assume further that during July 2000 (for example) you sold your 100 Ford shares for $6,500 (100 shares times $65 per share). Original 2000 Capital Gain Revised 2000 Capital Gain Increase (Decrease )
Sales Proceeds Less: Tax Cost Capital Gain Taxable capital gain (67%)*
$6,500 4,000 $2,500 $ 1,675
$6,500 3,843 $2,657 $ 1,780 $157 $105
* Please note that if the sale date is after October 17, 2000, only 50% of the capital gain would be taxable.
The increase in the taxable capital gain occurs because the ACB used in the calculation of your 2000 capital gain must be revised to reflect the ACB adjustments described above. The revised ACB of the sold Ford shares will be $3,843 (100 shares times the revised ACB of $38.43 per Ford share).
COMBINED YEAR 2000 IMPACT Your total taxable income will decrease by $148 (reversal of your 2000 foreign dividend income of $253 less the increase in your 2000 taxable capital gain of $105) as a result of making the election. The amount of your net tax refund is determined by multiplying the change to taxable income by your marginal tax rate for the year.
ELECTION Remember, you must file (i.e. mail through the Canadian postal system) an election in writing by September 11, 2001 in order to receive a tax refund as a result of the law change. A suggested election letter is attached to this notification.
Canadian Tax Election for Visteon Spin-off (To elect, a Ford shareholder must complete the boxes, sign the form and send to the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency by September 11, 2001).
1. On June 28, 2000 the undersigned, a shareholder of Ford Motor Company (Ford) as of June 12, 2000, received shares of Visteon Corporation ("Visteon") common stock in a spin-off transaction. 2. The undersigned elects, pursuant to section 86.1 of the Income Tax Act, that the Visteon shares received should be treated as an eligible distribution and not included in income for Canadian tax purposes. 3. Immediately prior to spin-off: a. Number of Ford Common Shares held: b. ACB of Ford shares: c. Fair market value of one Ford share: 4. Number of Visteon shares received: 5. ACB Allocated to: Visteon: calculated as: Ford: calculated as: US$ 43.5894
(b x c) / a + (b x c) a / a + (b x c)
3.93% 96.07%
Where, immediately after the distribution: a. is the fair market value of one Ford share: b. is the fair market value of one Visteon share: c. number of Visteon shares received per Ford share:
US$ 41.875 US$ 13.09375 0.130933
6. Previous tax reporting summary (complete the following as applicable): a. Indicate the amount (in Canadian dollars) related to the Visteon spin-off distribution that was reported in your 2000 income tax return:
b. Provide details of any dispositions of Visteon and/or Ford shares after June 28, 2000 and before January 1, 2001 so that capital gains/losses may be recomputed:
Shareholder: If applicable, please complete reverse side of this election.
______________________________ Shareholder Name (please print)
Shareholder SIN
Shareholder Signature
Note: This election must be completed and filed (i.e.postmarked by the Canadian postal system) with your District Tax Office on or before September 11, 2001. The address is indicated on the notice of assessment you receive each year from the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency.
Details of Dispositions of Visteon or Ford Shares: (to be completed by shareholder) Date Number and Name of shares sold Proceeds of disposition Tax Cost originally reported Capital gain/(loss) originally reported

The Bankruptcy Strategist
Contractually Amendable Retiree Health and Welfare Benefits
Third Circuit Prevents Plan Sponsor from Terminating
By Marshall S. Huebner and Brian M. Resnick
Volume 27, Number 12 October 2010
n July 13, 2010, in a controversial decision, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit ruled that a debtor must comply with the stringent procedural and substantive requirements of 11 U.S.C. 1114 (Section 1114) to terminate retiree health and welfare benefits that the debtor contractually retained the right to modify at will (referred to in this article as amendable benefits). See In re Visteon Corp., No 10-1944, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 14307 (3d Cir. July 13, 2010). In a lengthy decision, the court overruled the district and bankruptcy courts, broke with the majority of courts across the country that have addressed this issue (including, most recently, in the Delphi case), and reached the opposite result. See, e.g., In re Delphi Corp., No. 05-44481, 2009 WL 637315 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. March 10, 2009). The Third Circuit, however, in siding with the retirees, concluded that a plain reading of Section 1114 compels this result and reasoned that Congress likely had good cause to expand the rights of a sympathetic constituency at a time when its benefits are most vulnerable.
Section 1114
Background
Section 1114 provides significant protections to retirees by setting forth requirements for modifying retiree health and welfare benefits during an employers Chapter 11 case. The section was incorporated into Chapter 11 by the Retiree Benefits Bankruptcy Protection Act of 1988 (RBBPA), which Congress enacted in response to the harm and outrage arising from LTV Corporations termination of the health and life insurance benefits of approximately 78,000 retirees during its Chapter 11 case
Marshall S. Huebner (mhuebner@davispolk.com) is a partner and co-head of Davis Polk & Wardwell LLPs Insolvency and Restructuring Group, and Brian M. Resnick (bresnick@davispolk.com) is a senior associate in that group.
without any prior notice. This action was referred to by one Congressman as one of the most indefensible and unconscionable acts of any American corporation in this century. LTV Bankruptcy: Hearing before the S. Comm. on the Judiciary, 99th Cong., 2d Sess. (1986) at 28 (statement of Rep. Feighan). Although the public outcry ultimately prompted LTV to reinstate the benefits, Congress was sufficiently concerned about the potential hardship that would fall upon retirees from a unilateral termination of benefits that it enacted Section 1114, which prohibits the debtor from ceasing payments or modifying such benefits except pursuant to court order or consensual agreement with the authorized representative of the retirees. 11 U.S.C. 1114(e)(1). Retiree benefits is broadly defined to include medical, surgical, hospital, sickness, accident, disability or death benefits for retirees and their spouses and dependents, and includes insurance coverage therefore. 11 U.S.C. 1114(a). Notably, it excludes pension benefits. In order to modify retiree benefits, the debtor must make a proposal to the authorized retiree representative which provides for those necessary modifications in the retiree benefits that are necessary to permit the reorganization of the debtor and assures that all creditors, the debtor and all of the affected parties are treated fairly and equitably. 11 U.S.C. 1114(f)(1). Thereafter, the parties must meet and confer in good faith to reach mutually satisfactory modifications. 11 U.S.C. 1114(f) (2). If no agreement can be reached and the authorized representative refuses to accept the debtors proposal without good cause, the court shall order modifications so long as the requirements of Section 1114 are satisfied. 11 U.S.C. 1114(g). In order to ensure that the debtor complies with the outcome of the Section 1114 process post-emergence, RBBPA added Section 1129(a)(13) to the list of prerequisites for plan confirmation, which requires that the plan provide for the continuing payment of all retiree benefits at the level and for the duration
established pursuant to Section 1114.
Applicability of Section 1114 to Amendable Benefits
While Section 1114 unquestionably governs the modification of retiree benefits that a debtor is contractually obligated to continue to provide, a heated debate has ensued over whether Section 1114 was also intended to restrict the ability of debtors to modify amendable benefits. Compare Retired W. Union Employees Assn v. New Valley Corp. (In re New Valley Corp.), No. 92-4884, 1993 WL 818245 (D. N.J. Jan. 28, 1993) (holding that an employer is not required to comply with Section 1114 to modify amendable benefits), with In re Farmland Indus., Inc., 294 B.R. 903 (Bankr. W.D. Mo. 2003) (holding that an employer is required to comply with Section 1114 to modify amendable benefits). Furthermore, the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in LTV Steel Co. v. United Mine Workers (In re Chateaugay Corp.), 945 F.2d 1205 (2d Cir. 1991) similarly held that the interim measure mandated by RBBPA, which was applicable to cases prior to the applicability of Section 1114, required a debtor to continue paying retiree benefits during the bankruptcy case even after expiration of the CBA that mandated such benefits. Adding to the confusion was the addition of subsection (l) in 2005, which provides that a court must reinstate benefits as of the date they were modified if the modifications were made while the debtor was insolvent during the 180day period before the filing of the Chapter 11 petition, unless the balance of the equities clearly favors the modification. 11 U.S.C. 1114(l). Like the rest of Section 1114, subsection (l) is silent as to whether it applies to amendable benefits, but, as described below, has led some courts and commentators to draw the inference that Section 1114 must address such benefits because those are the only benefits that a debtor could lawfully have modified prior to bankruptcy. While the law in this area had evolved rather strongly in favor of permitting a
LJNs The Bankruptcy Strategist debtor to modify amendable benefits without complying with Section 1114 (with more than a dozen decisions in favor and only a few going the other way), the Visteon decision (particularly given the importance and influence of the Third Circuit) appears to have dramatically altered the playing field. whether it applies to amendable benefits, but the Third Circuit reasoned that its protections would be virtually meaningless if it did not because the debtor was already prohibited by law from modifying any other benefits prior to bankruptcy. The court found the analysis of the Delphi court that it is plausible that this subsection was intended to apply to prebankruptcy breaches of vested rights by debtors in financial distress strained. Finally, although there were several statements in the legislative history referring to the concern that companies keep their promises made to employees, the court found these statements insufficient to justify a departure from what it saw as the unambiguous plain language of the statute. Additionally, there were numerous statements made by legislators suggesting that Congresss concern was broader, in that they were trying to protect the legitimate expectations of the former workers, which could presumably encompass amendable benefits as well. In the courts view, it was irrelevant that in 2007 Congress considered, but did not pass, legislation that would have explicitly provided that Section 1114 applies to amendable benefits. A plausible explanation for the bills failure, the court figured, was that Congress determined that the existing statute was unambiguous and needed no clarification.
October 2010 massive expansion of ERISAs protections to cover retiree welfare benefits, and others opposed, the court speculated that RBBPA was an imperfect legislative compromise a move aimed at addressing certain deficiencies in the protection of retiree benefits because more substantial changes would not garner enough Congressional support or because more protections are yet to come. Though other courts struggled to find the logic in mandating that plan sponsors in bankruptcy be required to comply with Section 1114 to modify amendable benefits, the Third Circuit reasoned that this was precisely the time period when such benefits were most vulnerable. It reasoned that the market forces that restrain employers from exercising their rights to terminate benefits in good times are replaced in bankruptcy with intense cost-cutting pressures from creditors and prospective financiers. To be sure, debtors are entirely free to modify amendable benefits upon emergence from bankruptcy, but at least during the period when the benefits are most likely to be terminated (during bankruptcy), the Visteon court found that debtors must seek to do so in compliance with Section 1114. Importantly, the court expressed the view that in weighing the equities in connection with a debtors request to impose modifications in accordance with Section 1114, the court should consider whether the debtor has reserved the right to unilaterally modify the benefits.
The Visteon Decision
Visteon is one of the largest automotive parts suppliers in the world and, along with its former parent Ford Motor Corporation, had provided employees with health and life insurance benefits for decades. Visteon filed for Chapter 11 on May 28, 2009, and subsequently filed a motion to terminate the retiree benefits of approximately 6,500 workers and their spouses and dependants. Over the objection of unions and retirees, the bankruptcy court granted relief and the district court affirmed. The IUE-CWA (representing approximately 2,100 workers) appealed to the Third Circuit, which held that Section 1114 unambiguously applies to all retiree benefits in Chapter 11, regardless of unilateral modification rights. In so holding, the court relied heavily on the plain language of the statute, and reasoned that, contrary to the views of other courts, the plain reading does not lead to an absurd result or one that is inexplicably contrary to fundamental principles of bankruptcy law.
Section 1114 Applies to Amendable Benefits
The court found that the plain language of the statute compels the conclusion that Section 1114 applies to amendable benefits. The Third Circuit relied on the broad language in Section 1114(e)(1), which states that [notwithstanding] any other provision of this title, the [trustee] shall timely pay and shall not modify any retiree benefits, except by complying with the procedural requirements of the section. 11 U.S.C. 1114(e)(1) (emphasis added). In the courts view, these words (and the definition of retiree benefits), without any qualification, could hardly be more clear any means any. The court was unpersuaded by the argument (adopted by the court in In re New Valley Corp.) that Section 1129(a)(13) exemplifies the ambiguity in Section 1114 by requiring debtors to continue benefit payments after bankruptcy at the level established pursuant to Section 1114 only for the duration of the period the debtor has obligated itself to provide such benefits. 11 U.S.C. 1129(a)(13). Rather, the court found support for its view that Section 1114 was intended to apply to amendable benefits in the absence in Section 1114 of the durational qualifying language found in Section 1129(a)(13). Furthermore, while the Delphi court found the addition of subsection (l) in 2005 unrevealing as to the intended breadth of Section 1114, the Third Circuit in Visteon cited its addition as further evidence of Congresss intent to make the section broadly applicable. Like the rest of Section 1114, subsection (l) is silent as to
Reading Section 1114 to Apply To Amendable Benefits Does Not Lead to an Absurd Result
Perhaps the most significant point of disagreement between the opposing views on this issue is whether the plain reading of the statute leads to an absurd result because it gives retirees substantially greater rights in bankruptcy than they would have outside bankruptcy. The Delphi court presumed that Congress was cognizant of two fundamental principles of bankruptcy law when enacting Section 1114 - 1) a third partys rights should not be improved by the debtors bankruptcy filing (in fact the court could not identify any other provision of the Bankruptcy Code that improves the prepetition contractual rights of a third party as a result of the debtors bankruptcy filing); and 2) because bankruptcy is a zero sum game, statutory priorities should be narrowly construed. In the absence of legislative history clearly indicating Congresss intention to override these principles, the Delphi court declined to read Section 1114 (which it found ambiguous) in such a manner. The Third Circuit took strong issue with that analysis. In enacting ERISA, Congress intentionally determined that to require the vesting of retiree health and welfare benefits (like pension benefits) would likely result in employers choosing not to provide the benefits at all. The prevailing sentiment among many legislators (particularly in light of LTV) was that ERISAs lack of protections for retiree benefits imposed significant hardship on elderly recipients. With some legislators favoring a
Conclusion
Ultimately, the court characterized the protections of Section 1114 as guaranteeing retirees a voice, and some minimal amount of leverage, in a process that could otherwise be nothing short of devastating to them and to their families and communities. Visteon at 75-76. Given the unique vulnerability of retiree benefits in bankruptcy and the catastrophic consequences to covered individuals whose benefits are terminated, the Third Circuit found it unsurprising that Congress would single out retirees as arguably being the only constituency to fare better in bankruptcy than outside. The Third Circuits decision could prove costly to debtors with significant retiree benefit liabilities. As a practical matter, at least in the Third Circuit and any other jurisdiction that follows suit, debtors will likely continue to pay amendable benefits at least until emergence. At the very least, this decision greatly increases the bargaining power of retirees. Therefore, prospective debtors concerned about the costs of retiree benefits in bankruptcy may end up deciding to terminate amendable benefits more than 180 days before filing for bankruptcy.
Reprinted with permission from the October 2010 edition of the Law Journal Newsletters. 2010 ALM Media Properties, LLC. All rights reserved. Further duplication without permission is prohibited. For information, contact 877.257.3382 or reprints@alm.com. #055081-10-10-03
Tags
MEX-DV900 DAC-8 TA-4E BBA 2784 101925 RSH1nhsw GTO1204D HM1810 LM-230A 880 KDC-W3044 Sagem D86C MG100 Hdfx F50777S SD-P1600 HT-SF1000 AL145 Lexmark Z52 VCL-DEH17VA HD PVR TD-W8900GB ES-2108 Adsl2 32LG30-UD Sevilla MP54 Trip 505 KFX 50 Reader DVR-160PT DEX-P99R XW3100 TX-29AL10P Electronics Drum DD505 ESI66010X YP-T6X URC 1001 Lecoaspira 701 Action PAD SRX 280 SX-EN1 EW542F Express Server YP-VP1 LSP-430T ES-8067 MCM138D Ftxr42EV1B9 AJ3650 12 Speaker ML-2010 KX-TG2302 CM752ET KZ-42TS1E RP-U200 Autopilot 1000 W 405028X51 HTS3366 98 Laserjet 3800 TX200 Tough-8000 L194WS-BF DDX5022Y DVD-SH893M C1410 AWT1010AA TDE4124 Playset PL42C450b1M KDC-W6537UY DV2000T FW-C399-21M DR6050 30PF9946 XL-40 PX-777 26LX1D STR-DB895D Acer N35 Blade 4532 1993 Monitors AL1917 L72805 1290S Black Evo3 Sup 012R CPC-210 TX-32DK20F 7 IN1 DC220 Yamaha DD-7 MCB146 Galeo 2000 I845G Zanussi IZ16 Finepix A820 XD435U
manuel d'instructions, Guide de l'utilisateur | Manual de instrucciones, Instrucciones de uso | Bedienungsanleitung, Bedienungsanleitung | Manual de Instruções, guia do usuário | инструкция | návod na použitie, Užívateľská príručka, návod k použití | bruksanvisningen | instrukcja, podręcznik użytkownika | kullanım kılavuzu, Kullanım | kézikönyv, használati útmutató | manuale di istruzioni, istruzioni d'uso | handleiding, gebruikershandleiding
Sitemap
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101


