GM Closing Four Truck And SUV Plants In Dramatic Shift

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TOM KRISHER | June 3, 2008 07:57 PM EST | AP

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GM Chairman and CEO Rick Wagoner arrives at a news conference prior to attending the annual shareholders meeting Tuesday, June 3, 2008 in Wilmington, Del. Wagoner said Tuesday before the automaker's annual meeting the plants to be closed are in Oshawa, Ontario; Moraine, Ohio; Janesville, Wis.; and Toluca, Mexico. He also said the Hummer brand may be discontinued. (AP Photo/Bradley C Bower)

WILMINGTON, Del. — General Motors Corp. officially blew up its old business model Tuesday, closing four pickup truck and sport utility vehicle factories, announcing a new small car that could get 45 miles per gallon and shedding 8,350 jobs in the process.

Now the world's largest automaker by sales needs to figure out how it can sell enough cars to make money in a shrinking U.S. market and stay ahead of the bill collectors.

The automaker said it would idle pickup and SUV factories in Janesville, Wis.; Oshawa, Ontario; Moraine, Ohio; and Toluca, Mexico, as it tries to deal with a shift to smaller vehicles brought on by $4 per gallon gasoline. GM also took aim at the Hummer, one off the largest vehicles on U.S. highways, saying it would either be sold or get a remake.

The move cuts about 2,900 jobs in Oshawa, about 2,800 in Janesville, about 2,400 in Moraine and about 250 in Toluca, said GM spokesman Tom Wilkinson.

GM said the truck plant cuts, which will reduce capacity to produce pickups and large SUVs by about 35 percent, will save the company $1 billion per year, and when combined with earlier measures, by 2011 will save $15 billion over 2005 costs.

GM's moves, which come after a series of restructuring measures since 2005, are the result of a huge shift in U.S. consumer preferences for small cars and crossovers during the past two months.

"We at GM don't think this is a spike or temporary shift," Chief Executive Rick Wagoner said. "We believe that it is, by and large, permanent."

The automaker now will have to parlay its strong overseas sales and the lower North American costs into a profit by selling cars in the $15,000 to $20,000 range, half the price of its high-profit SUVs and pickup trucks.

"The new cars, they tend to price those accordingly," said Pete Hastings, senior analyst with Memphis, Tenn.-based Morgan Keegan & Co. "They tend to make money, just not as much money compared to the nice margins on the SUVs and large trucks."

Hastings is confident GM can pay bills and make money with its new North American cars, but that will be hard unless the U.S. economy recovers.

"I don't think they can get to profitability quickly if the economy stays where it is," he said.

GM lost $3.3 billion in the first quarter and burned through $3.4 billion in cash from January through March. Its May sales were down 28 percent compared with last May.

The pace of the cash burn may force GM back to the capital markets for more borrowing, Hastings said, although the company has said it has sufficient cash to withstand a downturn.

"They've got a lot of liquidity now," Hastings said. "They are burning through it faster than they thought they would earlier in the year."

GM ended the quarter with $23.9 billion in cash and $7 billion in credit facilities.

Just before the company's annual shareholders' meeting in Wilmington, Del., Wagoner also announced the automaker will build a new generation small car starting in mid-2010 at a factory in Lordstown, Ohio, that now makes the Chevrolet Cobalt.

In the past, costs generally were too high for Detroit automakers to turn a profit on small U.S.-built cars. But Wagoner said GM has lowered costs enough with new labor contracts and other measures to turn a profit.

"The direct answer is we need to," Wagoner told reporters. "We believe we can build a car there profitably."

In addition to costs, GM will have to make sure it has a competitive car that consumers will buy.

"I can assure you that is getting a tremendous amount of attention," he said.

The new car likely would be priced higher than the Cobalt, which runs in the mid-teens depending on how it's equipped. It would hit showrooms in the second half of 2010 and be powered by a 1-liter to 1.4-liter four-cylinder gasoline engine to be built at a factory in Flint. GM said that with a manual transmission it would get nine miles per gallon more than the current Cobalt, which gets up to 36 mpg on the highway.

Wagoner also announced that the board of directors has approved production of the Chevrolet Volt plug-in electric car, which GM plans to bring to showrooms by the end of 2010.

Fully charged, the Volt could drive about 40 miles without using any gasoline, and a small conventional engine would recharge the vehicle, extending its range and allowing it to get the equivalent of 150 miles per gallon.

Wagoner also said the iconic Hummer brand will be reviewed and potentially sold or revamped due to high fuel prices.

News of the job cuts was devastating to communities that house the factories, but hourly workers likely will move to other plants to replace 19,000 who will leave the company this year under early retirement and buyout offers.

However, the misery isn't over. Wagoner said GM is working on consolidating engine, transmission and other parts operations to go with the assembly plant cuts.

The actions add to a string of plant closures by the Big Three in the last several years. GM, Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler LLC have announced the shutdown of 35 plants since 2005, according to Sean McAlinden, chief economist with the Center for Automotive Research in Ann Arbor. Along with 35 additional closures at GM and Ford's chief suppliers, Delphi Corp. and Automotive Components Holdings LLC, he said the total hourly and salaried jobs eliminated comes to 149,000.

In that same period, foreign automakers have built or announced plans to build five U.S. assembly plants, he said. In 2007, foreign auto companies employed 113,000 people in the U.S., a number McAlinden projects will rise to 152,000 by 2011.

The Oshawa truck plant, which builds the Chevrolet Silverado and GMC Sierra pickups, likely will be shuttered next year. The Moraine plant near Dayton will stop making Chevy TrailBlazer and other midsize SUVs in 2010 "or sooner if demand dictates," Wagoner said.

In Janesville, the plant that builds medium-duty trucks and big SUVs like the Chevrolet Tahoe, will cease production starting at the end of 2009, finishing in 2010 or sooner if demand stays weak. In Toluca, production of medium-duty trucks will end by the end of 2008, Wagoner said.

The announcement was an economic blow to Janesville, which has long been entwined with auto making.

"There were some tears and a lot of people were kind of ticked off, but it's part of the business," said Scott Lambert, 39, who has worked at the plant for 13 years.

He said he was headed to buy an atlas to figure where other GM plants were that might be hiring.

Canadian Auto Workers President Buzz Hargrove said GM's decision to close its Oshawa truck plant betrays the labor agreement reached two weeks ago. He said the union will consider all options, including a strike.

GM committed to keep the plant open throughout the three-year agreement, Hargrove said.

GM President and Chief Operating Officer Fritz Henderson said GM is planning for gasoline prices to stay around $4 per gallon for the foreseeable future, "with a bias upwards."

When asked if GM should have moved more quickly to smaller vehicles, Henderson said he doesn't spend time looking in the rearview mirror.

"There's not much I can do about what I didn't do in the past," he said.

Shares of GM rose 14 cents to $17.58 Tuesday.

___

AP Business Writers Emily Fredrix in Janesville, Wis., and Jeff Karoub in Detroit, AP Auto Writer Dee-Ann Durbin in Detroit and Associated Press Writer Rob Gillies in Toronto contributed to this report.

___

On the Net:

General Motors Corp.: http://www.gm.com

(This version CORRECTS job cuts to about 8,350, not 10,000, per new info from GM.)

 
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Just another example of dunderheaded American corporate "leaders" failing to understand their own business. As usual, the working people will take the hit. For years, people with normal IQs have seen this coming.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:34 AM on 06/04/2008

I have been a loyal GM buyer and LOVE my Chevy Tahoe. I feel very bad for the GM employees, but GM, Ford and Chrysler have had a window of opportunity to become the great automakers they once were over the last 5 years. Where was their vision? The issue over fossel fuels did not just happen overnight. They have had PLENTY of time to design, develop and make a product that would meet the needs of consumers - they already had the product - how hard would it have been over the last 5 years to make their SUV's more fuel efficient?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:10 AM on 06/04/2008

Check out the Tahoe hybrid, gets 24 mpg in city driving and can still tow 8,000 lbs. The Hybrid Pickup is coming soon.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:12 AM on 06/04/2008

Did you ever have to tow 8000lbs? And if you did, why didn't you just get a rental truck for that day?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:46 PM on 06/04/2008

The Hummer is going the way of the Dinosaurs? Oh my god, Rush Limbaugh will be so surprised! I so enjoyed his rant that the Hummer is a more environmentally friendly vehicle than the Prius, and now we can see how truly prescient this scion of neo-conservative non-think truly was!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:13 AM on 06/04/2008

Glad it isn't in Michigan. We have been dealing with this for seven years without any help from anybody. Hope the rest of you enjoy your taste of the Clinton/Greenspan plan.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:03 AM on 06/04/2008

Welcome to NAFTA, CHINA TRADE, and Inflation.

Its hell folks and its turning us into a third world country. People who "Speculated" are not getting rich they are saving at least some money because the dollar is tanking. Some people now are having sour grapes and they do not like it. TOO BAD.

We are going to have to have electric cars by 2025 or we are finished. SOONER we need the volt going 120 Miles before using gas or more. We need to get a new currency and not no Amero.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:49 AM on 06/04/2008

New currency? We could ask our friends in the south for their Pesos. I hear the Peso is hard like steel when compared to the soft dollar.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:17 AM on 06/04/2008

Actually I have heard that Mexico is thinking about putting SILVER back in their money. That would make it 20 times more valuable than the American dollar.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:54 AM on 06/04/2008
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I've said it before and i'll say it again. The price at the pump should be based on your vehicles gas mileage. 30+ mpg you pay today's outrageous prices. Large gas guzzlers would pay more for the same gallon of gas, a lot more. You use more to go a mile, you pay more to go a mile.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:32 AM on 06/04/2008

This silly suggestion neglects the load a vehicle carries.....which varies. If "Murkans" would merely accept the necessity to match the Europeans and Japanese (and soon the Chinese) in motorcar efficiency, what is essentially an individual, econ. problem, would not intrude into any political discussion.....

45 mpg SOUNDS impressive until the mileage of the top FIFTEEN European/Japanese cars is presented: All OVER 60 mpg and have been available for some time!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:50 AM on 06/04/2008

Have you ever driven a 60mpg car that's not a hybrid? No? It looks, feels and loads like a chair on wheels. The loading part is the best... you can't fit anything in, so it's done in no time.

http://www.markpascua.com/wp-content/smart-car.jpg

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:20 AM on 06/04/2008

California Governor Gray Davis tried to get a penalty tax imposed on the most expensive personal vehicles. The Republicans got him recalled, and now Arnie is Governator.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:30 AM on 06/04/2008

VICTIM OF PEAK OIL.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:01 AM on 06/04/2008
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Fail.

Peak oil is a canard ... the people promulgating this theory are just pimping the current oil bubble for their own gain.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:32 PM on 06/04/2008

These canards sell for $4.50 at the gas station. Quite a bird, the canard.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:47 PM on 06/04/2008
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Big vehicles have the highest profit to cost ratio - but depend on affordable gas prices and sufficient customers with steady income. Instability in oil regions aided by a pro big oil government ensures gas price increases - inflation and passed on consumer cost = less disposable income..
Gas prices go up - sales drop - and layed off people going from $30 per hour to
$8 per hour jobs aren't going to buy many Chevy Tahoes.

Given that GM used to have a GNP greater than all but the richest 15 countries - one might niavely
have thought they would hire some people that are good long range planners - but they didn't.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:23 PM on 06/03/2008

In my opinion, the SUV, should have never been invested and is a major reason why oil companies are making money in this country. The people making them were living in a bubble from day 1. They are too dangerous on the roads. To me, I always laugh when I pick one out and watch one drive. Almost inevitably, within about 10 minutes, almost all cars nearly cause an accident when switching lanes. They absolutely fight and refuse to drive behind other SUV's. Do as I say, not as I do attitude.

Parents do not need SUV's, nobody needs SUVs. There is no place for them in parking lots, they take forever to turn and accelerate. Those delays laws should have been passed to have prevented their manufacture. They are also prone to tipping over and actually killing the children the parents who drive them are trying to protect with regard to side collisions.

I sometime take my movie camera and look at how many vehicles go through on a traffic light signal. Because SUV lengths and they take so long to move, far fewer cars make it through the lines for making turns get far longer.

It is unfortunate, but gone of the days of the plenty. Now come the days where all Americans must consider the decisions they make need to consider the environment and safety of everyone. Busses and better mass transportation are the keys self sufficiencies reducing overall expenses

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:39 AM on 06/04/2008

I saw a young mother getting out of her Cadillac Escalade SUV monday. It was so new, it didn't even have plates yet. I guess some people are still buying those monsters, although I can't understand why.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:17 AM on 06/04/2008
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People are still buying those monsters because they're the same price at fuel efficient vehicles, at least in my neighbourhood they are. You can now buy a Ford F350 for less than a Toyota Corolla, a lot less. It actually makes sense. What you're not spending on the vehicle, you'll be spending at the pump.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:14 PM on 06/04/2008

Jeez, just when I was about to get a home equity loan to buy a Hummer they pull out the rug. I'll bet GM won't even give you a .50 caliber roof mounted machine gun as an accessory.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:51 PM on 06/03/2008

But just imagine all the large iron for demolition derbys that will hit the scrap yards shortly! We will have 400hp Bronco Collision Races for decades to come. And since the engines don't have to run for more than a few minutes, we could "turbo charge" them with nitro! Woooow! Booooom! Baaang!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:15 PM on 06/03/2008

You make it sound like a joke. The joke is that so many people did just that.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:25 AM on 06/04/2008

You have too much corporate welfare via the good old lobbying schemes. Congressmen and Senators can be bought and sold; rules and laws can be changed, tailored to fit big corps. at the expenses of the tax payers.

Now they have to shut down four plants,destroying jobs jobs and jobs due to their pompous short-sighted executive mis-management.. That's societally irresponsible, taking away the livelihood of so many due to naked greed, no insightful long term planning at the top. They know when and how to screw the people with the blessing of government.

This is another case in point, big corp destroying jobs after receiving big tax cut provided by the Bush administration, which proclaims big corps create jobs. Tt's all crap.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:23 PM on 06/03/2008
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THE MODERN AUTOMOBILE IS OBSOLETE. A hybrid or plugin hybrid only adds complexity and cost to existing obsolete 100-year old internal combustion solutions. The modern engine is a highly engineered and extremely complex and expensive device. The typical gasoline engine is less than 30% efficient; the rest is wasted as heat and pumped out through the radiator and exhaust. It is all too stupid.

In 2002 Bosh advertised their 100th anniversary of Robert Bosch's invention of spark plugs for the gasoline engine with full page spreads. I laughed, for it indicated that spark plugs, like the internal combustion engine were hopelessly old. Why have we not advanced in this area?

The internal combustion engine has a very limited torque-range and necessitates more expensive highly complex and power-robbing devices before the power can get to the wheels. Energy-robbing? The super-dupper Bugatti Veyron 2000 HP V-16 results in only 1000HP reaching the wheels after all the power-robbing parts take their due.

The parts, complexity, expense and inefficiencies involved in the modern engine and transaxle unit is nuts when compared to the simplicities soon to be enjoyed by the electric car. The electric car of the near future will be so simple that car prices should fall substantially and these machines will be faster than existing street rods.
Cont...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:15 PM on 06/03/2008

Look who is envious of Prius drivers who get 47+mpg!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:05 PM on 06/03/2008
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PART 2:
A chassis with drive-by-wire; a computer; a battery pack; and a small turbine generator (optional for extended range) are the only major components.

Power will be supplied by two/four wheel-motors. The motor, steering, regenerative braking, skid control, anti-lock control, traction control and controlling electronics will all be a part of the wheel motor assembly.

The skin of the car will be covered by thin-film solar. Parking in an outdoor lot means plugging into the grid and selling electricity to further reduce cost of ownership. Installing solar panels at home means that the costs to run the car can be reduced to a negative number as already achieved by California residents using plug-in conversions.

Ergo, the American big three needs to push hard and fast in this direction where an automobile becomes a cheap sustainable commodity rather than the excessively complex wallet-robbing asphalt elephants that they have so far focused upon.

(And only they may be strong enough to force the oil conglomerates to release the battery technology patents that they have locked away. E.g: Shell sued Toyota and killed the EV; Exxon holds important LION tech patents, etc...)

2006 Bugatti Veyron 16.4
http://www.sport-cars.org/serve.php?t=bugattiveyron

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:39 PM on 06/03/2008
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As an automotive quality engineer fro 20 years, I was taken aback by the USA automaker leader's lack of desire and ability to successfully manage their companies. It's like the fix was in.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:53 PM on 06/03/2008
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Share prices as of last week.

Toyota share price: $97.79. down from $125 a year ago.

Market value: $176,500 million

GM share price: $17.15. down from $40 a year ago.

Market value: $9,700 million

Honda share price: $31.74. down from $37.5 a year ago.

Market value: $115,900 million

Ford share value: $6.78. down from $9 a year ago.

Market value: $14,900 million

If the markets go for a dive because of high energy prices later this year, GM might drop as low as two bucks!!! If their Volt rollout succeeds, they should be back to $17 by 2011.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:13 PM on 06/03/2008

"If their Volt rollout succeeds..."

The operative word is "IF". Now, who's gonna put their retirement savings in GM? Given the prospects in 2011, you could be millionaires in no time and live BIG. IF... the Volt rollout succeeds.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:07 PM on 06/03/2008

The real victims will be, as usual, the people doing the very hard demanding work of building vehicles. The head-in-the-sand executives responsible for GM's continued production of now-extinct product lines will keep their jobs or exit with full pockets. Every round of job cuts has been focused on the blue collar workers, whose daily work built the cars that produced the income that paid for the huge salaries paid to these hacks while they continually made bad decisions, misread trends, and signed off on so many ill-fated designs, and blamed GM's ever-shrinking market share on the cost of health benefits for the people who do the real physical labor.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:25 PM on 06/03/2008
- DofG I'm a Fan of DofG permalink
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Competition among humans is a "blind animal" of survival, for it destroys all that it creates! The point is, as a matter forward looking economics, and, in light of the oil embargo of the 1970's, these gas guzzling vehicles should have never been a part of the landscape for common use transportation. However, the lack of common sense seems to be a fixture in our delusional, "let the market decide", approach to economic sustainability.

The thing that too many people, in high and low places, don't get about "liberty" is that in the long run, it would be better to have a "benign king" than to have an advanced form of enlightened government, such as ours, that excedes the level of enlightenment of the body politic! So ultimately, it will not be our techno- gadets, or material aspirations that will save our way of life. It will be our human development! Our problem is not the lack of material, but a sound "collective purpose" that will eliminate our operating at crossed purposes in the name of something we truly don't understand-FREEDOM!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:30 PM on 06/03/2008

Benign kings are hard to come by. Americans are trained from birth to be dumb by our not so kind ruling princes.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:54 PM on 06/03/2008

I'm ready for it. Give me a small, maybe 3 cylinder car, for between 8 to 10 thousand that gets the 50mpg the old Chevy Geo did, and that will be my next new car.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:39 PM on 06/03/2008

And let me add... if it costs 20 thousand, forget about it. I don't have that sort of money for mere transportation. My ego is not as involved in car ownership as the owner of the 3 hummers whose comment comes after mine. Besides, I'm a patriot and know that the owner of hummers cares not a bit for America. In fact, I'd call him a traitor, and the sooner we begin to see these gas hoggers as supporters of terrorism, the sooner we can slim down auto sizes. They don't need to be as fat as the lady who's waiting to sing.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:46 PM on 06/03/2008
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