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GM in Crisis—5 Reasons Why America's Largest Car Company Teeters on the Edge
Popular Mechanics ^ | November 18, 2008 | Larry Webster

Posted on 11/18/2008 7:26:37 PM PST by Delacon

GM in Crisis—5 Reasons Why America's Largest Car Company Teeters on the Edge

Strapped for cash, GM is on the brink of bankruptcy. It's a dramatic shift for a car company that had begun to right itself after decades of trouble. So what happened? We turned to PM Advisory Board Member and Chairman of the Center for Automotive Research, David Cole, for his take. Ironically, GM's perfect storm of troubles hit just as the company seemed to be making progress on a number of fronts: The company is producing its most competitive cars and trucks in decades, and the upcoming 2011 Chevy Volt has generated more excitement for GM than any product in recent memory. On the cost side, the market slowdown has closed factories, which has removed most if not all of the industry's overcapacity of cars and trucks. And when a new labor agreement kicks in, GM's cost to produce a car will fall to a point where it can once again be profitable. That's the good news. The question is, will GM be around to benefit once the economy improves? The troubles at GM are vast and complex, but Cole summarized what he sees as the immediate and long-range factors that have brought the once dominant automaker to its knees.
By Larry Webster
Published on: November 18, 2008

(Photograph by General Motors/John F. Martin)

1. Demand Shift and Uncertain Energy Policy

Cole says that "The first shot was the dramatic rise in energy prices this past summer. That caused a rapid mix shift in vehicles—and had a major impact on profitability." GM, Ford and Chrysler have relied on SUVs and trucks for the majority of their profits. Those vehicles commanded high sticker prices and by the late nineties made up 50 percent of the U.S. car market. When demand for the big vehicles dropped quickly and customers went for smaller, less expensive, less profitable cars, auto companies had two major issues to deal with: A loss of revenue and a backlog of unwanted trucks. Cole adds, "A big factor is our lack of an energy policy in this country. We just haven't had one. When we do things like corn-to-ethanol that don't have a foundation in economics or technology, you're really kind of teeing up to a situation where you're going to have a problem."

2. The Financial Meltdown

"The Big Kahuna in this is the financial meltdown," said Cole, "When you're down to 10 or 11 million light-vehicle sales a year, that is such a precipitous fall even from a recessionary standpoint. What has really caused the problem is lack of cash." Wall Street's problems have hit GM in two big ways: The company can't borrow money to ride out the storm, and the credit squeeze has dramatically hindered car sales. The auto industry lives on credit as do its customers, so when access to car loans or leases is limited, sales fall off a cliff. Yearly auto sales in the U.S. have hovered around the 15 to 16 million mark for the past few years and many analysts believe the total for 2008 could be as low as 10 million—the lowest in more than a decade.

3. Legacy Costs

Every car GM makes carries "legacy costs"—the costs of providing healthcare and pensions to scores of retired workers. For every GM worker, there are about 10 dependants, which are defined as retired workers and their families. According to Cole, "When the international car companies came to the U.S., the move stuck the domestics with a very large disadvantage related to legacy costs. And that's $2000 a car." That two grand must be built into the sticker price of any new GM car and truck. And that's money on top of developing, producing and marketing a car—costs that Honda, Toyota and others don't have. It makes competing difficult for the domestic automakers, "like playing basketball with a bowling ball," according to Cole. GM's per-hour labor rate for car assembly is about $75 per hour, compared to $40 to $45 for other car companies. That particular disadvantage, says Cole, will be "gone by the end of next year," when a new labor agreement goes into effect.

4. Sub-Par Quality and Lackluster Cars

Back in the early '80s, while GM president Roger Smith fell in love with the idea of automating workers out of car factories, Toyota and others focused on refining their production techniques and produced much higher quality cars. Customers left GM's brands en masse. The company's market share has fallen from a high of just over 50 percent in 1962 to around 23 percent in 2007. In recent times, the quality gap has narrowed considerably but "perception trails reality," commented Cole. Getting those customers back would require a herculean effort. Vehicle's like GM's very first attempt at a crossover—the sub-par 2001 Aztec—didn't help. Cars like that left customers will little incentive to return.

5. Global Slowdown

GM operates in 41 countries, and if its U.S. operation has been in decades of decline, other markets have been growing, particularly in Asia. But the financial shock has spread across the globe and sales are down everywhere. In effect, GM is bleeding from several wounds. As the largest of the Big Three, GM has been the focus of the media spotlight. But Ford and Chrysler are facing similar problems. And of course, thanks to many of the same factors, even healthy car companies are feeling the pain. The domestic auto companies weren't the only ones that capitalized on our thirst for light trucks. Half of Toyota's offerings are trucks and minivans. The difference is, Toyota doesn't come into this tough period already weakened by past mistakes.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events; US: Michigan
KEYWORDS: automakers; bailout; bankruptcy; detroit; generalmotors; gm
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#1 Is the fault of our government and us(for not demanding one) going back to Nixon.

#2 is flat out our government's fault...and us. They control the money but we sure as hell let them throw it at us.

#3 and #4 are GM's own damn fault. Nobody else.

#5 Not GM's fault that it happened but sure as hell their fault how they were unprepaired for it.

Do we really want the government and the automakers in bed together to solve this with a bailout?

1 posted on 11/18/2008 7:26:38 PM PST by Delacon
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To: Delacon

SAVE THE UAW, uh, uh, um, ah, um, I mean, um uh, GM!
- The One!


2 posted on 11/18/2008 7:30:32 PM PST by April Lexington (We are now in the era of Timothy Leary Economics!)
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To: Delacon

GM has 7,000 dealers. toyota has around 1,500. That’s another area of overhead that will be hard to reverse


3 posted on 11/18/2008 7:32:41 PM PST by ari-freedom (So this is how Liberty dies... with thunderous applause)
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To: April Lexington

So what DOES the unqualified One have to say about the bailout?

I um, uh, uh, uh, um, can someone, um um, uh, call the, um, um, call Hillery or Bill, um, um....

He’s been awfully quiet about this issue. Must be nuance.


4 posted on 11/18/2008 7:32:49 PM PST by April Lexington (We are now in the era of Timothy Leary Economics!)
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To: Delacon

1. Unions
2. Unions
3. Unions
4. Unions
5. Piss Poor Cars


5 posted on 11/18/2008 7:33:27 PM PST by 2banana (My common ground with terrorists - they want to die for islam and we want to kill them)
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To: Delacon

Companies don’t want to take responsibility for their own failures.

Individuals don’t want to take responsibility for their own failures.

What else is new.


6 posted on 11/18/2008 7:37:19 PM PST by ladyjane
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To: Delacon

“3. Legacy Costs”
...when the Japanese started building plants here they could hire young workers who were healthy...some of them are getting older now....others will be eligible to retire in a decade or so...eventually they’re going to encounter the legacy costs of an aging workforce themselves.


7 posted on 11/18/2008 7:40:13 PM PST by STONEWALLS
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To: Delacon

The arrogant executives who ran the Big Three were always fighting with the unions, but at the same time they were in bed with them. Like the old steel mills, they thought they could just keep raising prices forever. They were wrong.


8 posted on 11/18/2008 7:41:35 PM PST by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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To: 2banana

Going from the 80s to the 90s there was a huge gain in the overall quality of American cars. I don’t see that as a serious problem; the problem is pricing their products out of the real world.


9 posted on 11/18/2008 7:41:54 PM PST by wendy1946
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To: STONEWALLS

It depends what kind of retirement benefits you provide. If it’s an open-ended commitment to keep raising retirement pay forever, and these guarantees are unfunded, then one way or another you’ll run into trouble.

If it’s vested in the workers, then it’s THEIR responsibility to save up for retirement.

Having said that, I don’t know what kind of commitments Toyota is making. But I suspect they have a lot better sense.


10 posted on 11/18/2008 7:44:00 PM PST by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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To: STONEWALLS

Nope. They built their factories in free to work states and put everyone on 401Ks. They wont have the same legacy costs.


11 posted on 11/18/2008 7:45:05 PM PST by Delacon ("The urge to save humanity is almost always a false front for the urge to rule." H. L. Mencken)
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To: 2banana
Actually, my experience over the last 10 or 12 years has been that GM makes the best cars and trucks. My father has a business which utilizes a fleet of all three makes, and the municipality I worked for for 11 years has a similar fleet. I've driven GM, Ford, and Chrysler products, and hands down, I'll take a Chevy any day. Ford cars were the worst, though they make a decent truck. Dodges were OK, but they really drink up gas and the tranny's seem to go to shit early.

What's the consensus here at FR on buying GM stock, which ended the day at $3.09 a share? Is it a bargain, or is it an exercise in flushing money down the terlet?

12 posted on 11/18/2008 7:45:46 PM PST by yooper (If you don't know where you're going, any road will take you there......)
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To: Delacon

GM is hurt by Congress all the time . . .CAFE standards . . Energy Policy on drilling . . self imposed Oil Supply Crisis.
If Congress BAILS OUT GM . . . will Congress Pass laws anymore that negatively Impact the Auto Industry ?
Tis an interesting Confliction for Congressional Greenies and Corporate Ownership of GM by Congress.


13 posted on 11/18/2008 7:50:02 PM PST by 4Speed
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To: Delacon

GM is hurt by Congress all the time . . .CAFE standards . . Energy Policy on drilling . . self imposed Oil Supply Crisis.
If Congress BAILS OUT GM . . . will Congress Pass laws anymore that negatively Impact the Auto Industry ?
Tis an interesting Confliction for Congressional Greenies and Corporate Ownership of GM by Congress.


14 posted on 11/18/2008 7:50:37 PM PST by 4Speed
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To: Delacon

Sounds like a perfect candidate for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy to me.


15 posted on 11/18/2008 7:51:40 PM PST by K-oneTexas (I'm not a judge and there ain't enough of me to be a jury. (Zell Miller, A National Party No More))
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To: Delacon
6. The myth that ricegrinders are better than American cars. The same media, marketing, disparagement, and myth generation techniques used to brainwash America to buy the Obama crappola has been used for years to promote riceburners.
16 posted on 11/18/2008 7:51:43 PM PST by Proud2BeRight
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To: 4Speed

GM can’t make money they have sold more cars in the last decade than ever.


17 posted on 11/18/2008 7:52:36 PM PST by scooby321
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To: Delacon
#1 Is the fault of our government and us(for not demanding one) going back to Nixon.

#1 is an instant replay of the seventies after the first oil shocks. Only it wasn't SUV's it was big gas-guzzling sedans and overpowered muscle cars. Don't blame the government, the Japanese saw this coming. The big three were too arrogant to see that slick marketing and brand loyalty wouldn't save them.

When Americans voted with their pocketbooks Detroit, the einsteins of the car business, were caught flatfooted. They fought back, with garbage. Remember Chrysler's K-Car anyone? How about the Pacer? Gremlin?Yeccch. As bad as the Aztec.

Meanwhile Datsun gave us the 240-Z, ushering in the era of dominance by Japan.

18 posted on 11/18/2008 7:52:51 PM PST by hinckley buzzard
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To: Cicero

like freddie mac, they expect to be bailed out because they are a protected institution. So they felt they could make any mistake and still get away with it.


19 posted on 11/18/2008 7:54:36 PM PST by ari-freedom (So this is how Liberty dies... with thunderous applause)
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To: yooper

don’t, even if they survive the current shareholds will likely get nothing.

if you want to speculate on gm recovering, try to find a supplier that is viable without them but will do better if gm survives.


20 posted on 11/18/2008 7:57:00 PM PST by Reverend Wright (Promise #1: public financing; Promise #2: middle class tax cut?)
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