GM Korea's March sales dive; seeks to halt one shift at
Bupyeong plant
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[April 02, 2018]
By Haejin Choi and Hyunjoo Jin
SEOUL (Reuters) - General Motors Co's South
Korean unit has proposed suspending one of two shifts at a plant near
Seoul, an internal union newsletter seen by Reuters showed, increasing
uncertainty about the fate of the factory as the U.S. automaker grapples
with slumping sales.
GM Korea said on Monday its domestic sales for March more than halved
from a year earlier, deepening a decline in the aftermath of the
announcement of planned restructuring of the money-losing operation.
The parent company said in February it would shut down its factory in
the southeastern city of Gunsan and decide on the fate of its three
remaining plants in South Korea amid mounting losses in the country.
"We have to fight so that the future of the No.2 assembly line (in the
city of Bupyeong) does not follow that of the Gunsan factory," union
workers at the assembly line said in the newsletter.
The newsletter showed the proposal to suspend the second shift at one of
two factories in Bupyeong was made on Wednesday, during a meeting with
union delegates at the plant.
A GM Korea spokesman said the firm is considering changing a shift
system at the plant, but has not yet discussed the matter with the
union.
About 2,600 workers at GM Korea, equivalent to about 15 percent of its
staff, have applied for a redundancy package that the U.S. automaker has
offered as part of restructuring, union officials have said.
The spokesman said the No.2 plant, which makes Malibu sedans and Captiva
sport utility vehicles (SUV) on the outskirts of Seoul, was running at
50 percent of capacity. The Bupyeong No.1 plant, however, which makes
the Trax SUV, was operating at full capacity, he said.
GM Korea's exports have declined in recent years since the U.S.
automaker pulled its Chevy brand from Europe, a major market for the
Korean output.
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Vehicles are assembled at an assembly line of GM Korea's Bupyeong
plant in Incheon, South Korea March 29, 2018. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji
"The proposal is worrisome," a union official told Reuters.
The plant is running at two shifts, but for only two days a week, and will see
more declines in production, with the production of the Captiva to end this
year, he said.
"The company's image is in free fall since it announced the plant shutdown. The
company, not the union, is to blame," he said.
Rivals gain
While the automaker's presence in the South Korean market is small with most
cars made there destined for export, the continuing decline in sales highlights
reluctance among prospective customers to own GM vehicles, given the uncertainty
about its operations, market-watchers said.
GM Korea posted a 58 percent drop in local sales for March to 6,272 units versus
a year prior, the company said in a statement.
The automaker recorded total sales of 41,260 vehicles in March, including
exports, compared with 50,850 a year earlier. Its domestic sales had plummeted
by 48 percent for February, year-on-year.
Rivals gained, with Hyundai Motor Co increasing domestic sales by 6 percent and
Kia Motors Corp's up 2 percent.
(Reporting by Haejin Choi and Hyunjoo Jin; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman
and Christopher Cushing)
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