GM buyouts cut 5,000 salaried jobs, CFO says

About 5,000 General Motors Co salaried workers took buyouts to leave the company, putting the company well on the way to hitting a $2 billion cost-cutting target, the automaker’s chief financial officer said Tuesday.

GM shares were trading down 2.1% in afternoon trading, even though CFO Paul Jacobson said demand for GM’s trucks and SUVs remains strong in the United States.

GM has been able to raise prices in the United States over the past two years as supply chain bottlenecks kept production in check. Going forward, Jacobson said the opportunity to boost prices much further “isn’t there. We have to be more urgent around cost-cutting.”

GM set a goal of cutting $2 billion from operating costs by the end of 2024, with 30%-50% of the total being achieved this year. The response to a buyout program means GM will be at the higher end of that 2023 goal, Jacobson said during a Bank of America conference.

GM CEO Mary Barra said in a memo to employees on Tuesday seen by Reuters that February job cuts of a few hundred jobs and 5,000 buyouts “have provided approximately $1 billion towards” the $2 billion target. She added “a company-wide involuntary separation program is not a consideration at this point.”

GM will cut production to keep inventories in check, Jacobson said. The automaker earlier this year shut down a pickup truck assembly factory in Fort Wayne, Indiana, for two weeks.

GM will take a $1 billion charge in the first quarter, he said. The company had previously projected $1.5 billion in charges related to staff reductions.

Jacobson said GM is now allocating 75% of its annual capital spending toward electric vehicle projects, which in the short term will be less profitable than the automaker’s combustion vehicles.

GM is in a good position to benefit from U.S. electric vehicle subsidies under the Inflation Reduction Act because of its investments in North American battery, raw materials and EV assembly, Jacobson said.

GM has three battery factories in North America, and will announce the location of a fourth domestic battery plant soon, he said.

GM will further cut costs through reducing vehicle complexity, expanding use of shared subsystems between gas-powered and electric vehicles, focusing investment in growth initiatives with near-term benefits and decreasing “spend levels across all parts of the company, including travel and marketing,” Barra said.

Some analysts have questioned GM’s continued investments in its Cruise robo-taxi business. Jacobson said Cruise is expanding and “executing really well.”

Source : Reuters

GLOBAL BUSINESS AND FINANCE MAGAZINE

Recent Posts

Goldman lifts MSCI EM target on AI boost, flags Iran deal relief for forex, bonds

The brokerage raised its benchmark ​index target to 2,000 from 1,850, implying a nearly 12%…

2 days ago

Bahrain raises $1bln in 10-year USD bond; demand exceeds $3bln

Strong demand enabled Bahrain to tighten pricing by 37.5 basis points from IPTs. Bahrain has…

2 days ago

Gold falls on stronger dollar, oil amid renewed Middle East hostilities

Dollar, oil gain on fading hopes of US-Iran peace deal. Gold fell ‌on Wednesday, weighed…

2 days ago

What Three Decades of Advancing Clean Air Taught Us—and Where We Go from Here

In 1990, facing a public health crisis, Mexico City initiated its first multiyear air quality…

2 days ago

Blue finance: Making waves for sustainable oceans and freshwater resources

Water is a key pillar of life and livelihoods — but it is massively underfinanced.…

2 days ago

The early takeoff of space innovation

The conventional account of US space sector transformation credits the post-2005 entry of SpaceX, Blue…

2 days ago