Thought you might like an update on how your investment in GM is faring. Today, GM said it generated more than $3 billion in cash last quarter, and it plans to start repaying government loans early. That’s the good news.
GM still lost $1.2 billion, but that might also qualify as good news, as Marketplace’s Alisa Roth reported this morning:
Roth: OK, so $1.2 billion is obviously a lot of money. But it is less than GM has lost recently, and it’s a lot better than GM had predicted it would be doing at this point. So the company’s actually feeling pretty confident.
The good news just keeps on coming. GM’s CEO Fritz Henderson seems highly motivated to pay back the taxpayers. From Bloomberg:
“This company does seem to have a fire lit under it and is making decisions faster,” said auto consultant Keller, who is based in Stamford, Connecticut.
Henderson said it was “my mission” to disprove a Sept. 9 government report predicting that the Treasury would be unlikely to recover all of the estimated $85 billion in federal aid provided to GM and Chrysler Group LLC.
But since I don’t own a pair of rose-colored glasses, we’re going to stop right there with the good news. First of all, here’s what needs to happen in order to repay the government: GM would need to hit a market value of $68 billion. That’s $11 billion more than its top market value of $57 billion in 2000.
Plus, GM’s burning desire to repay the government might have it chasing short-term strategies at the cost of longer-term sustainability. The government’s goals for GM included expanding its American workforce and building smaller, more fuel-efficient cars. Still a lot of work to do in those departments. GM’s North American unit lost $651 million while its international business showed a profit of $238 million. It sold a lot of cars in China. More from the Wall Street Journal:
On the green-car front, there wasn’t much to highlight in the third quarter. In fact, its best-selling cars in the U.S. included three small- to midsize SUVs — GMC Terrain, Chevrolet Equinox and Cadillac SRX-and Chevrolet Camaro, the classic muscle car.
U.S taxpayers can’t blame GM for chasing profits in China or in the American muscle car market, particularly if it means they are going to get their loans paid back sooner. But if GM doesn’t start making moves to bolster its long-term sustainability, especially in the U.S., already skeptical taxpayers may start to wonder what was the point of owning a car company anyways.
Start to wonder?
More to come tonight on Marketplace…
There’s a lot happening in the world. Through it all, Marketplace is here for you.
You rely on Marketplace to break down the world’s events and tell you how it affects you in a fact-based, approachable way. We rely on your financial support to keep making that possible.
Your donation today powers the independent journalism that you rely on. For just $5/month, you can help sustain Marketplace so we can keep reporting on the things that matter to you.