General Motors has dramatically reversed its decision to sell its European arm, Vauxhall-Opel. It had agreed to sell a majority stake to a consortium led by the parts maker Magna, a bid that was supported by a large share of money from Russia's state bank.
GM says the eleventh-hour decision to keep Vauxhall-Opel has been made because it can now see its way to being profitable in the US. This is possible because earlier this year it went through bankruptcy in the States, slimmed itself down and shook off debt. It also says the car business is turning the corner in Europe.
It certainly makes sense for GM to keep its European arm. The engineers here had developed both the Insignia and Astra, cars that were being planned for use all over the world under various GM brands.
If the engineering of those cars had leached away to Russian hands, GM's competitiveness would have been compromised. For instance, GM would have wanted to continue selling its Korean Chevy Cruze in Europe and Russia (a big market these days). But if a cheap version of the Astra were to be built in Russia by Magna, the Cruze would have lost out. And GM would have shot itself in the foot.
So GM never really wanted to sell the European arm. It was forced to put it up for sale when it went bankrupt and got support from the US Government. Taxpayers there wouldn't have wanted their dollars going to prop up workers here.
Now GM is out of bankruptcy, rather more quickly than many people thought it would be, it has more control over its strategy again. Its bosses are talking of beginning to float ‘new GM' shares on Wall Street next year, and use the money to begin repaying the roughly $50 billion (about, deep breath, £31 billion) of US taxpayer loans.
But today's news certainly doesn't mean business as usual for Vauxhall and Opel. For years they have lost fortunes in bad times and made only slim profits in good times. That's got to change. GM needs to have a solidly profitable European arm. So difficult days await the 55,000 workers in Britain and the rest of Europe, because factories will have to be shut to make sure that Opel and Vauxhall have a cost base that's realistic for the number of cars they can sell.
And more political battles will affect the result. The German Government wanted to protect German factories and jobs. Magna was the bidder that promised to do that, at the likely sacrifice of jobs in Britain and Spain. In return it was promised financial help by Chancellor Merkel's government.
That support is now in jeopardy. Vauxhall-Opel will likely enter a time of horse-trading again, to see whether the German, British or Spanish governments will give aid. In return those countries will be seeking promises over jobs on their soil. Promises that might rob GM of the competitiveness it has lacked for so long.
Paul Horrell
GM calls off Vauxhall sale
General Motors cancels plans to sell off its European arm, but UK jobs are still under threat
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Mikeado commented on this article
at 11:52 am on 04 November 2009
Well, with the two new cars they should be off to a good start, but I see far fewer Insignias than Mondeos, and no new Astras as yet (are they out now?). Maybe image still lingers a little too much for some people and the badge is still considered uncool, or the design still isn't captivating enough. Competition is stiff too, though.
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jimlambie commented on this article
at 12:14 pm on 04 November 2009
Vauxhall still exists?!
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The_Monk commented on this article
at 12:58 pm on 04 November 2009
According to a Vauxhall salesman in Derby, Mikeado, you'd probably start seeing the new Astra on roads by the end of this month. Vauxhall will never be a premium marque like BMW, Mercedes, Audi or Jaguar, but like Ford and Citroen I think they have aspirations of being a cheaper alternative whilst offering the same premium quality as their Teutonic peers. I think a lot of companies have that aspiration, actually. The Insignia is a world away from everything Vauxhall have produced before and I think right now is the time, in my opinion, for GM to stick close to them and give as much support to the company and the workers as possible. 2010 might be a good year for Vauxhall if they revamp the current lineup. Any news on a Corsa or Tigra replacement? Perhaps a VX220 ressurection?
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Obelix commented on this article
at 01:08 pm on 04 November 2009
What about Saab now?
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The_Monk commented on this article
at 01:14 pm on 04 November 2009
Aren't Saab owned by Koenigsoegg?
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