GM tops estimates despite coronavirus, sets North
American restart
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[May 06, 2020] By
Nick Carey and Ben Klayman
DETROIT (Reuters) - General Motors Co <GM.N>
on Wednesday reported a huge plunge in first-quarter profit that raced
past expectations, and the automaker outlined plans for a May 18 restart
of most of its North American plants shut down by the coronavirus
pandemic.
The news sent GM shares up 8% in pre-market trading.
The No. 1 U.S. automaker posted net income attributable to common
stockholders of $247 million or 17 cents per share, down more than 88%
from $2.12 billion or $1.48 per share in the same period in 2019.
Excluding one-time items, GM reported 62 cents per share, higher than
the 30 cents per share expected by Wall Street analysts.
The Detroit automaker has slashed costs and made other moves during the
COVID-19 outbreak, including suspending its dividend and share buybacks,
closing its Maven car-sharing unit, delaying work on some product
programs, reducing marketing budgets and cutting white-collar workers'
salaries. It also added $16 billion to its cash position by drawing down
credit lines.
GM had previously suspended its 2020 profit outlook because of
uncertainty over the outbreak and did not provide an update on
Wednesday.
Smaller U.S. rival Ford Motor Co <F.N> last month raised another $8
billion from corporate debt investors to further shore up its finances
after previously drawing down its credit lines.
GM Chief Financial Officer Dhivya Suryadevara warned employees in an
internal video on March 26 that "significant austerity measures" were
necessary to avoid "serious damage" to GM's long-term viability.
One ray of hope has been China, where the pandemic began but where GM
has resumed production. While first-quarter sales there fell 43%, they
rebounded to grow by double digits in April. That offers hope for the
U.S. market, where sales declined 7% in the first quarter.
U.S. automotive production ground to a halt in March as the number of
COVID-19 infections grew rapidly. But with President Donald Trump
pushing for Americans to get back to work and several U.S. states
reopening their economies, the focus in the auto sector has shifted to
when production can safely restart.
GM, Ford and Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV (FCA) <FCHA.MI><FCAU.N> are
aiming to resume production some time in May and are negotiating with
the United Auto Workers (UAW) union, which represents their U.S. hourly
workers, about when and how to safely restart.
The Detroit automakers are anxious to end the cash burn that has
occurred during the shutdown. While FCA said Tuesday it expects most of
its North American plants to reopen by May 18, GM and Ford have not
announced restart dates.
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Mike Guillen works on the assembly line at the General Motors
Assembly Plant in Arlington, Texas June 9, 2015. REUTERS/Mike Stone
The UAW said last month that it was "too soon and too risky" to reopen plants in
early May. President Rory Gamble said last week the union was asking for "as
much testing as possible" to protect its workers.
In its restart playbook, GM's strategy relies heavily on social distancing,
temperature checks, regular sanitizing, improved plant ventilation and use of
personal protective equipment, but does not address assembly line workstations.
Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer previously extended the state's stay-at-home
order through May 15 but lifted restrictions for some businesses other than
manufacturing. Neighboring Ohio allowed manufacturing to resume on Monday.
Once production resumes, the question will be how fast U.S. demand rebounds,
with some dealers expecting big discounts to lure consumers back to showroom
floors.
Some industry officials have said some level of government stimulus for the U.S.
auto sector will be needed for consumers once the pandemic recedes.
During the Great Recession of 2008-09, the U.S. government rolled out a "cash
for clunkers" program, which offered consumers rebates of up to $4,500 to trade
in older gas guzzlers.
Other U.S. automakers already outlined the pain caused by the crisis.
FCA on Tuesday reported a first-quarter loss of $1.8 billion, said it expected a
significant loss in the second quarter and scrapped its full-year profit
outlook.
Last week, Ford said its second-quarter loss would more than double to over $5
billion from $2 billion in the first quarter. Executives said the current
economic environment was too unpredictable to offer a full-year profit outlook.
Also last week, Tesla Inc <TSLA.O> reported its third consecutive profitable
quarter, but the results were overshadowed by Chief Executive Elon Musk, who
described as "fascist" the sweeping U.S. stay-at-home orders that have idled the
electric carmaker's California plant.
(Reporting by Ben Klayman and Nick Carey; Editing by Nick Zieminski)
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