Strike At GM
:
A Month of Strike Will
Deeply Hurt GM
Sep 2007
By Evander Klum
For more than two weeks, the negotiations between General
Motors and the United Auto Workers have been watched by people
especially those in the automotive industry.
Since the beginning, a strike had been
planned in case the talks would not satisfy UAW representatives
and its members. Last Monday, due to unresolved job security
issues, the strike was put into action. With 73,000 employees
walking out, analysts estimated that if the strike will take
long, it will cause deep financial problems to the top US
automaker.
GM can handle a week of strike, said automotive analysts. GM
has sufficient manufactured cars to survive a short term strike
and car makers have worked to keep their inventories low to
lessen the costs making a prolonged strike a major problem.
"This really hurts the car dealers and the customer a lot
because carmakers are stuck with the cars they have on their
lots," said said Rebecca Lindland, senior automotive analyst at
consultancy Global Insight.
According to Paul Taylor, chief economist for the National
Automotive Dealers Association, with GM's 65 day inventory for
its over-all light vehicles, it is still in good shape for its
commercial customers. To add its 90 days worth of pick-up
trucks available, GM is healthy.
GM's Buick Enclave, a new crossover SUV that is garnering
good press and has high market demand has only a 24-day
supply said Taylor. The crossover SUV segment of GM is the
only growing broad category of light vehicles. On the
other hand, according to Edmonds.com, it is not only the
Buick Enclave that is at risk if this strike continues,
with low inventories of the GMC Acadia, Saturn Sky and the
Saturn Vue, car shoppers may have difficulty in finding
these models in case they want them.
"Generally, there will be a lasting loss of market share if
there is a long work stoppage," Taylor said.
"A week is OK, but a month starts to be problematic. There
are other popular vehicles and new cars being launched, so more
than a week or two starts to create difficulties for GM's
production schedule."
The US auto industry is not very promising at the moment for
the automakers due to the slowing down of in the housing sector
that raises monthly mortgage payments that makes consumers put
off buying a new car. According to Wards data, car sales are
expected to slump from its annual rate of 16.5 million units
last year to 16.1 million this year.
"So we are expecting a soft year in light vehicle sales and
the strike will exacerbate that," Taylor said.
"This is a brutally competitive industry in which a consumer
is used to a large selection of cars and trucks, and now there
is a bigger group of automakers manufacturing [profitable]
full-size pickups than several years ago, so it's important
that a strike be stetted quickly in what is already a weak
retail environment."
The three US automakers, GM, Ford Motors (maker of top of
the line Mercury catalytic converter) and Chrysler
have combined losses of $15 billion last year. Their U.S
market share fell to below 50 percent losing it their Asian
rivals. Being the lead of the three companies, GM had been
exerting efforts to work out the negotiations to recover
from their loss and to prevent further
losses.
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